Collision-Free Network Exploration
DERENIOWSKI, Dariusz
Department of Algorithms and Systems Modelling [ETI GUT] [Gdansk University of Technology]
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Department of Algorithms and Systems Modelling [ETI GUT] [Gdansk University of Technology]
DERENIOWSKI, Dariusz
Department of Algorithms and Systems Modelling [ETI GUT] [Gdansk University of Technology]
Department of Algorithms and Systems Modelling [ETI GUT] [Gdansk University of Technology]
KLASING, Ralf
Algorithmics for computationally intensive applications over wide scale distributed platforms [CEPAGE]
Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique [LaBRI]
Algorithmics for computationally intensive applications over wide scale distributed platforms [CEPAGE]
Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique [LaBRI]
KOSOWSKI, Adrian
Networks, Graphs and Algorithms [GANG]
Laboratoire d'informatique Algorithmique : Fondements et Applications [LIAFA]
Algorithmics for computationally intensive applications over wide scale distributed platforms [CEPAGE]
Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique [LaBRI]
Networks, Graphs and Algorithms [GANG]
Laboratoire d'informatique Algorithmique : Fondements et Applications [LIAFA]
Algorithmics for computationally intensive applications over wide scale distributed platforms [CEPAGE]
Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique [LaBRI]
PAJAK, Dominik
Algorithmics for computationally intensive applications over wide scale distributed platforms [CEPAGE]
Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique [LaBRI]
< Reduce
Algorithmics for computationally intensive applications over wide scale distributed platforms [CEPAGE]
Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique [LaBRI]
Language
en
Communication dans un congrès
This item was published in
LATIN - 11th Latin American Theoretical INformatics Symposium, 2014-03-31, Montevideo. 2014-03-31, vol. 8392, p. 342-354
Springer
English Abstract
A set of mobile agents is placed at different nodes of a $n$-node network. The agents synchronously move along the network edges in a {\em collision-free} way, i.e., in no round may two agents occupy the same node. In each ...Read more >
A set of mobile agents is placed at different nodes of a $n$-node network. The agents synchronously move along the network edges in a {\em collision-free} way, i.e., in no round may two agents occupy the same node. In each round, an agent may choose to stay at its currently occupied node or to move to one of its neighbors. An agent has no knowledge of the number and initial positions of other agents. We are looking for the shortest possible time required to complete the collision-free {\em network exploration}, i.e., to reach a configuration in which each agent is guaranteed to have visited all network nodes and has returned to its starting location. We first consider the scenario when each mobile agent knows the map of the network, as well as its own initial position. We establish a connection between the number of rounds required for collision-free exploration and the degree of the minimum-degree spanning tree of the graph. We provide tight (up to a constant factor) lower and upper bounds on the collision-free exploration time in general graphs, and the exact value of this parameter for trees. For our second scenario, in which the network is unknown to the agents, we propose collision-free exploration strategies running in $O(n^2)$ rounds for tree networks and in $O(n^5\log n)$ rounds for general networks.Read less <
ANR Project
Calculabilité et complexité en distribué - ANR-11-BS02-0014
Origin
Hal imported