Geometric graph theory and wireless sensor networks

Item

Title
Geometric graph theory and wireless sensor networks
Identifier
d_2009_2013:dc2ad5e7dbd1:11213
identifier
11552
Creator
Sarioz, Deniz,
Contributor
Janos Pach
Date
2012
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Computer science | Applied mathematics | approximation algorithms | geometric graph theory | geometric representations of graphs | hypergraph transversals | obstacle representations of graphs | wireless sensor networks
Abstract
In this work, we apply geometric and combinatorial methods to explore a variety of problems motivated by wireless sensor networks. Imagine sensors capable of communicating along straight lines except through obstacles like buildings or barriers, such that the communication network topology of the sensors is their visibility graph. Using a standard distributed algorithm, the sensors can build common knowledge of their network topology.;We first study the following inverse visibility problem: What positions of sensors and obstacles define the computed visibility graph, with fewest obstacles? This is the problem of finding a minimum obstacle representation of a graph. This minimum number is the obstacle number of the graph. Using tools from extremal graph theory and discrete geometry, we obtain for every constant h that the number of n-vertex graphs that admit representations with h obstacles is 2o&parl0;h2&parr0; . We improve this bound to show that graphs requiring O( n/log2n) obstacles exist.;We also study restrictions to convex obstacles, and to obstacles that are line segments. For example, we show that every outerplanar graph admits a representation with five convex obstacles, and that allowing obstacles to intersect sometimes decreases their required number.;Finally, we study the corresponding problem for sensors equipped with GPS. Positional information allows sensors to establish common knowledge of their communication network geometry, hence we wish to compute a minimum obstacle representation of a given straight-line graph drawing. We prove that this problem is NP-complete, and provide a O(log OPT)-factor approximation algorithm by showing that the corresponding hypergraph family has bounded Vapnik-Chervonenkis dimension.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Computer Science