Fundamentals of Large Sensor Networks: Connectivity, Capacity, Clocks and Computation
Nikolaos M. Freris, Hemant Kowshik, P. R. Kumar

TL;DR
This paper explores the theoretical foundations of large sensor networks, focusing on connectivity, capacity, clock synchronization, and in-network data aggregation, providing bounds, models, and algorithms for these fundamental issues.
Contribution
It offers new theoretical insights and bounds on connectivity, capacity, clock synchronization, and function computation in large-scale sensor networks.
Findings
Critical range for network connectivity determined
Fundamental bounds on network capacity established
Algorithms for clock synchronization and data aggregation analyzed
Abstract
Sensor networks potentially feature large numbers of nodes that can sense their environment over time, communicate with each other over a wireless network, and process information. They differ from data networks in that the network as a whole may be designed for a specific application. We study the theoretical foundations of such large scale sensor networks, addressing four fundamental issues- connectivity, capacity, clocks and function computation. To begin with, a sensor network must be connected so that information can indeed be exchanged between nodes. The connectivity graph of an ad-hoc network is modeled as a random graph and the critical range for asymptotic connectivity is determined, as well as the critical number of neighbors that a node needs to connect to. Next, given connectivity, we address the issue of how much data can be transported over the sensor network. We present…
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