Computability of Perpetual Exploration in Highly Dynamic Rings
Marjorie Bournat (Regal), Swan Dubois (Regal), Franck Petit (Regal)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the fundamental problem of perpetual exploration by autonomous robots in highly dynamic ring environments, providing algorithms and impossibility results to determine the minimum number of robots needed for solvability.
Contribution
It characterizes the exact number of robots required for perpetual exploration in dynamic rings and offers algorithms and impossibility proofs for various scenarios.
Findings
Three algorithms for perpetual exploration in dynamic rings.
Two impossibility results establishing lower bounds.
Necessary and sufficient robot counts for different ring sizes.
Abstract
We consider systems made of autonomous mobile robots evolving in highly dynamic discrete environment i.e., graphs where edges may appear and disappear unpredictably without any recurrence, stability, nor periodicity assumption. Robots are uniform (they execute the same algorithm), they are anonymous (they are devoid of any observable ID), they have no means allowing them to communicate together, they share no common sense of direction, and they have no global knowledge related to the size of the environment. However, each of them is endowed with persistent memory and is able to detect whether it stands alone at its current location. A highly dynamic environment is modeled by a graph such that its topology keeps continuously changing over time. In this paper, we consider only dynamic graphs in which nodes are anonymous, each of them is infinitely often reachable from any other one, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptimization and Search Problems · Distributed Control Multi-Agent Systems · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
