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Clock synchronization

About: Clock synchronization is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7786 publications have been published within this topic receiving 133324 citations.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
31 Oct 2003
TL;DR: SECTOR, a set of mechanisms for the secure verification of the time of encounters between nodes in multi-hop wireless networks, is presented and it is shown that, due to their efficiency and simplicity, they are compliant with the limited resources of most mobile devices.
Abstract: In this paper we present SECTOR, a set of mechanisms for the secure verification of the time of encounters between nodes in multi-hop wireless networks. This information can be used notably to prevent wormhole attacks (without requiring any clock synchronization), to secure routing protocols based on last encounters (with only loose clock synchronization), and to control the topology of the network. SECTOR is based primarily on distance-bounding techniques, on one-way hash chains and on Merkle hash trees. We analyze the communication, computation and storage complexity of the proposed mechanisms and we show that, due to their efficiency and simplicity, they are compliant with the limited resources of most mobile devices.

487 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
J.P. Fishburn1
TL;DR: Using a model to detect clocking hazards, two linear programs are investigated: minimizing the clock period, while avoiding clock hazards, and for a given period, maximizing the minimum safety margin against clock hazard.
Abstract: Improving the performance of a synchronous digital system by adjusting the path delays of the clock signal from the central clock source to individual flip-flops is investigated. Using a model to detect clocking hazards, two linear programs are investigated: (1) minimizing the clock period, while avoiding clock hazards, and (2) for a given period, maximizing the minimum safety margin against clock hazard. These programs are solved for a simple example, and circuit simulation is used to contrast the operation of a resulting circuit with the conventionally clocked version. The method is extended to account for clock skew caused by relative variations in the drive capabilities of N-channel versus P-channel transistors in CMOS. >

485 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
07 Nov 2002
TL;DR: This paper considers the design of power-saving protocols for mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) that allow mobile hosts to switch to a low-power sleep mode and proposes three power management protocols, namely dominating-awake-interval, periodically-fully-aw Wake-Interval, and quorum-based protocols, which are directly applicable to IEEE 802.11-based MANETs.
Abstract: Power-saving is a critical issue for almost all kinds of portable devices. In this paper, we consider the design of power-saving protocols for mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) that allow mobile hosts to switch to a low-power sleep mode. The MANETs being considered in this paper are characterized by unpredictable mobility, multi-hop communication, and no clock synchronization mechanism. In particular, the last characteristic would complicate the problem since a host has to predict when another host will wake up to receive packets. We propose three power management protocols, namely dominating-awake-interval, periodically-fully-awake-interval, and quorum-based protocols, which are directly applicable to IEEE 802.11-based MANETs. As far as we know, the power management problem for multi-hop MANETs has not been seriously addressed in the literature. Existing standards, such as IEEE 802.11, HIPERLAN, and Bluetooth, all assume that the network is fully connected or there is a clock synchronization mechanism. Extensive simulation results are presented to verify the effectiveness of the proposed protocols.

468 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2003
TL;DR: Simulation studies indicate that the proposed asynchronous wakeup protocol is quite effective under various traffic characteristics and loads: energy saving can be as high as 70%, while the packet delivery ratio is comparable to that without power management.
Abstract: Due to the slow advancement of battery technology, power management in wireless networks remains to be a critical issue. Asynchronous wakeup has the merits of not requiring global clock synchronization and being resilient to network dynamics. This paper presents a systematic approach to designing and implementing asynchronous wakeup mechanisms in ad hoc networks. The optimal wakeup schedule design can be formulated as a block design problem in combinatorics. We propose a neighbor discovery and schedule bookkeeping protocol that can operate on the optimal wakeup schedule derived. Two power management policies, i.e. slot-based power management and on-demand power management, are studied to overlay desirable communication schedule over the wakeup schedule mandated by the asynchronous wakeup mechanism. Simulation studies indicate that the proposed asynchronous wakeup protocol is quite effective under various traffic characteristics and loads: energy saving can be as high as 70%, while the packet delivery ratio is comparable to that without power management.

466 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
26 Jul 2001-Nature
TL;DR: This work reports that quantum entanglement and squeezing can be employed to overcome the classical limits in procedures such as positioning systems, clock synchronization and ranging and uses frequency-entangled pulses to construct quantum versions of these protocols.
Abstract: A wide variety of positioning and ranging procedures are based on repeatedly sending electromagnetic pulses through space and measuring their time of arrival. The accuracy of such procedures is classically limited by the available power and bandwidth. Quantum entanglement and squeezing have been exploited in the context of interferometry1,2,3,4,5, frequency measurements6, lithography7 and algorithms8. Here we report that quantum entanglement and squeezing can also be employed to overcome the classical limits in procedures such as positioning systems, clock synchronization and ranging. Our use of frequency-entangled pulses to construct quantum versions of these protocols results in enhanced accuracy compared with their classical analogues. We describe in detail the problem of establishing a position with respect to a fixed array of reference points.

404 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202384
2022136
2021134
2020280
2019322
2018341