On the capacity of wireless networks: the relay case
Proceedings - IEEE INFOCOM - Tập 3 - Trang 1577-1586 vol.3
Tóm tắt
Gupta and Kumar (see IEEE Transactions an Information Theory, vol.46, no.2, p.388-404, 2000) determined the capacity of wireless networks under certain assumptions, among them point-to-point coding, which excludes for example multi-access and broadcast codes. We consider essentially the same physical model of a wireless network under a different traffic pattern, namely the relay traffic pattern, but we allow for arbitrarily complex network coding. In our model, there is only one active source/destination pair, while all other nodes assist this transmission. We show code constructions leading to achievable rates and derive upper bounds from the max-flow min-cut theorem. It is shown that lower and upper bounds meet asymptotically as the number of nodes in the network goes to infinity, thus proving that the capacity of the wireless network with n nodes under the relay traffic pattern behaves like log n bits per second. This demonstrates also that network coding is essential: under the point-to-point coding assumption considered by Gupta et al., the achievable rate is constant, independent of the number of nodes. Moreover, the result of this paper has implications' and extensions to fading channels and to sensor networks.
Từ khóa
#Wireless networks #Relays #Telecommunication traffic #Traffic control #Upper bound #Information theory #Broadcasting #Complex networks #H infinity control #Network codingTài liệu tham khảo
10.1109/TNET.2002.801403
10.1002/0471200611
10.1002/ett.4460100604
10.1109/18.825799
gupta, 2001, Towards an information theory of large networks: An achievable rate region, IEEE Int Symp Info Theory Washington DC June 2001, 10.1109/ISIT.2001.936022
10.1109/TIT.1979.1056084
10.1002/j.1538-7305.1948.tb00917.x
gastpar, 2001, To code, or not to code: On the optimality of symbol-by-symbol communication, EPFL DSC Tech Rep 026
berger, 1971, Rate Distortion Theory A Mathematical Basis for Data Compression
ford, 1962, Flows in Networks