Near-Optimal Radio Use For Wireless Network Synchronization
Milan Bradonjic, Eddie Kohler, Rafail Ostrovsky

TL;DR
This paper develops near-optimal algorithms for wireless device synchronization that minimize radio usage, providing tight bounds for two processors and scalable solutions for many processors, even considering interference.
Contribution
It introduces deterministic bounds for two-processor synchronization and near-optimal randomized algorithms for multiple processors, extending to interference-aware models.
Findings
Deterministic $ heta( oot n)$ bounds for two processors.
Near-matching randomized bounds for multiple processors.
Algorithms effective even with communication interference.
Abstract
We consider the model of communication where wireless devices can either switch their radios off to save energy, or switch their radios on and engage in communication. We distill a clean theoretical formulation of this problem of minimizing radio use and present near-optimal solutions. Our base model ignores issues of communication interference, although we also extend the model to handle this requirement. We assume that nodes intend to communicate periodically, or according to some time-based schedule. Clearly, perfectly synchronized devices could switch their radios on for exactly the minimum periods required by their joint schedules. The main challenge in the deployment of wireless networks is to synchronize the devices' schedules, given that their initial schedules may be offset relative to one another (even if their clocks run at the same speed). We significantly improve previous…
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