Tight Bounds on Information Dissemination in Sparse Mobile Networks
Alberto Pettarin, Andrea Pietracaprina, Geppino Pucci, Eli Upfal

TL;DR
This paper establishes tight bounds on the time required for information to spread among mobile agents in a sparse network, revealing that the broadcast time is independent of transmission range below a critical percolation threshold.
Contribution
It provides the first tight characterization of broadcast time in sparse mobile networks below the percolation point, showing independence from transmission range and mobility speed.
Findings
Broadcast time is O(n / 7k) for r < r_c.
No connected component exceeds logarithmic size in the sparse regime.
Below the percolation point, broadcast time is unaffected by transmission range.
Abstract
Motivated by the growing interest in mobile systems, we study the dynamics of information dissemination between agents moving independently on a plane. Formally, we consider mobile agents performing independent random walks on an -node grid. At time , each agent is located at a random node of the grid and one agent has a rumor. The spread of the rumor is governed by a dynamic communication graph process , where two agents are connected by an edge in iff their distance at time is within their transmission radius . Modeling the physical reality that the speed of radio transmission is much faster than the motion of the agents, we assume that the rumor can travel throughout a connected component of before the graph is altered by the motion. We study the broadcast time of the system, which is the time it takes for all agents to know…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis · Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
