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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Wireless scheduling with power control

TLDR
In this article, the authors considered the problem of scheduling arbitrary wireless links in the physical model of interference to minimize the time for satisfying all requests, and gave an algorithm that achieves an approximation ratio of O(log n c log log Δ), where n is the number of links and Δ is the ratio between the longest and the shortest link length.
Abstract
We consider the scheduling of arbitrary wireless links in the physical model of interference to minimize the time for satisfying all requests. We study here the combined problem of scheduling and power control, where we seek both an assignment of power settings and a partition of the links so that each set satisfies the signal-to-interference-plus-noise (SINR) constraints.We give an algorithm that attains an approximation ratio of O(log n c log log Δ), where n is the number of links and Δ is the ratio between the longest and the shortest link length. Under the natural assumption that lengths are represented in binary, this gives the first approximation ratio that is polylogarithmic in the size of the input. The algorithm has the desirable property of using an oblivious power assignment, where the power assigned to a sender depends only on the length of the link. We give evidence that this dependence on Δ is unavoidable, showing that any reasonably behaving oblivious power assignment results in a Ω(log log Δ)-approximation.These results hold also for the (weighted) capacity problem of finding a maximum (weighted) subset of links that can be scheduled in a single time slot. In addition, we obtain improved approximation for a bidirectional variant of the scheduling problem, give partial answers to questions about the utility of graphs for modeling physical interference, and generalize the setting from the standard 2-dimensional Euclidean plane to doubling metrics. Finally, we explore the utility of graph models in capturing wireless interference.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A constant-factor approximation for wireless capacity maximization with power control in the SINR model

TL;DR: In this article, a constant factor approximation algorithm was proposed for the SINR capacity maximization problem in the physical interference model with fading metrics, which achieves an O(log n) approximation for single-hop and multi-hop scheduling scenarios.
Book ChapterDOI

Distributed contention resolution in wireless networks

TL;DR: It is proved that the schedule generated this way is only an O(log2 n) factor longer than the optimal one, provided that the prespecified power levels satisfy natural monontonicity properties.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Wireless capacity with oblivious power in general metrics

TL;DR: It is shown that the mean power assignment is optimal for capacity maximization of bi-directional links, and a tight θ(log n)-approximation of scheduling bi- Directional links with power control using oblivious power is given.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Wireless link scheduling under physical interference model

TL;DR: A unified algorithmic framework is built and approximation algorithms for link scheduling with or without power control are developed for maximizing throughput capacity or minimizing the communication latency in multihop wireless networks under the physical interference model.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Wireless connectivity and capacity

TL;DR: An algorithm is provided that connects an arbitrary point set in O( log n) slots, improving on the previous best bound of O(log2 n) due to Moscibroda and initiating the study of network design problems in the SINR model beyond strong connectivity, obtaining similar bounds for biconnected and k-edge connected structures.
References
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Book

Wireless Communications

Journal ArticleDOI

The capacity of wireless networks

TL;DR: When n identical randomly located nodes, each capable of transmitting at W bits per second and using a fixed range, form a wireless network, the throughput /spl lambda/(n) obtainable by each node for a randomly chosen destination is /spl Theta/(W//spl radic/(nlogn)) bits persecond under a noninterference protocol.
Book

Lectures on Analysis on Metric Spaces

Juha Heinonen
TL;DR: Theoretically, doubling measures and quasisymmetric maps have been studied in the context of Euclidean spaces in this article, where doubling measures have been shown to be equivalent to Poincare inequalities.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Joint scheduling and power control for wireless ad-hoc networks

TL;DR: A cross-layer design framework to the multiple access problem in contention-based wireless ad hoc networks is introduced, limiting multiuser interference to increase single-hop throughput and reducing power consumption to prolong battery life.