Affiliation:
1. Ben Gurion University of the Negev
2. ETH Zurich
3. Technion
4. Weizmann Institute of Science
5. Bar Ilan University
Abstract
The rules governing the availability and quality of connections in a wireless network are described by
physical
models such as the
signal-to-interference & noise ratio (SINR)
model. For a collection of simultaneously transmitting stations in the plane, it is possible to identify a
reception zone
for each station, consisting of the points where its transmission is received correctly. The resulting
SINR diagram
partitions the plane into a reception zone per station and the remaining plane where no station can be heard.
SINR diagrams appear to be fundamental to understanding the behavior of wireless networks, and may play a key role in the development of suitable algorithms for such networks, analogous perhaps to the role played by Voronoi diagrams in the study of proximity queries and related issues in computational geometry. So far, however, the properties of SINR diagrams have not been studied systematically, and most algorithmic studies in wireless networking rely on simplified
graph-based
models such as the
unit disk graph (UDG)
model, which conveniently abstract away interference-related complications, and make it easier to handle algorithmic issues, but consequently fail to capture accurately some important aspects of wireless networks.
This article focuses on obtaining some basic understanding of SINR diagrams, their properties and their usability in algorithmic applications. Specifically, we have shown that assuming uniform power transmissions, the reception zones are convex and relatively well-rounded. These results are then used to develop an efficient approximation algorithm for a fundamental point location problem in wireless networks.
Funder
Israel Science Foundation
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Hardware and Architecture,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering,Software
Cited by
28 articles.
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