Analysis of Movement-Based Connectivity Restoration Problem in Wireless Ad-Hoc and Sensor Networks

11/21/2020
by   Umut Can Cabuk, et al.
0

Topology control, including topology construction and maintenance phases, is a vital conception for wireless ad-hoc networks of any kind, expressly the wireless sensor networks (WSN). Topology maintenance, the latter phase, concerns several problems, such as optimizing the energy consumption, increasing the data rate, making clusters, and sustaining the connectivity. A disconnected network, among other strategies, can efficiently be connected again using a Movement-based Connectivity Restoration (MCR) method, where a commensurate number of nodes move (or are moved) to the desired positions. However, finding an optimal route for the nodes to be moved can be a formidable problem. As a matter of fact, this paper presents details regarding a direct proof of the NP-Completeness of the MCR Problem by a reduction of the well-studied Steiner Tree Problem using the minimum number of Steiner points and the bounded edge length.

READ FULL TEXT

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset