The Cost of Global Broadcast in Dynamic Radio Networks
Mohamad Ahmadi, Abdolhamid Ghodselahi, Fabian Kuhn, Anisur Rahaman, Molla

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the complexity of single-message broadcast in dynamic radio networks, revealing how network stability, connectivity, and adversary adaptiveness influence the time required for broadcast, with new models and bounds introduced.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized dynamic graph model and provides new upper and lower bounds on broadcast time depending on network stability, connectivity, and adversary obliviousness.
Findings
Efficient broadcast algorithms exist for $ au$-oblivious adversaries with specific parameters.
Broadcast is provably hard for adaptive adversaries even with high connectivity.
The paper establishes tight bounds for broadcast time under various adversary models.
Abstract
We study the single-message broadcast problem in dynamic radio networks. We show that the time complexity of the problem depends on the amount of stability and connectivity of the dynamic network topology and on the adaptiveness of the adversary providing the dynamic topology. More formally, we model communication using the standard graph-based radio network model. To model the dynamic network, we use a generalization of the synchronous dynamic graph model introduced in [Kuhn et al., STOC 2010]. For integer parameters and , we call a dynamic graph -interval -connected if for every interval of consecutive rounds, there exists a -vertex-connected stable subgraph. Further, for an integer parameter , we say that the adversary providing the dynamic network is -oblivious if for constructing the graph of some round , the adversary has access…
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