Wireless Network Simplification: the Gaussian N-Relay Diamond Network
Caner Nazaroglu, Ayfer Ozgur, Christina Fragouli

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the capacity of Gaussian N-relay diamond networks, showing that a small subset of relays can nearly achieve the network's capacity, and provides efficient algorithms for identifying such subnetworks.
Contribution
It introduces a method to find high-capacity relay subsets and offers a hybrid capacity approximation with both multiplicative and additive gaps.
Findings
A single relay can achieve about half of the total capacity.
High-capacity subnetworks can be efficiently identified.
The proposed approximation outperforms existing methods in intermediate SNR regimes.
Abstract
We consider the Gaussian N-relay diamond network, where a source wants to communicate to a destination node through a layer of N-relay nodes. We investigate the following question: what fraction of the capacity can we maintain by using only k out of the N available relays? We show that independent of the channel configurations and the operating SNR, we can always find a subset of k relays which alone provide a rate (kC/(k+1))-G, where C is the information theoretic cutset upper bound on the capacity of the whole network and G is a constant that depends only on N and k (logarithmic in N and linear in k). In particular, for k = 1, this means that half of the capacity of any N-relay diamond network can be approximately achieved by routing information over a single relay. We also show that this fraction is tight: there are configurations of the N-relay diamond network where every subset of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Communication and Network Coding · Mobile Ad Hoc Networks · Caching and Content Delivery
