Wireless Scheduling with Power Control

Wireless Scheduling with Power Control
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We consider the scheduling of arbitrary wireless links in the physical model of interference to minimize the time for satisfying all requests. We study here the combined problem of scheduling and power control, where we seek both an assignment of power settings and a partition of the links so that each set satisfies the signal-to-interference-plus-noise (SINR) constraints. We give an algorithm that attains an approximation ratio of $O(\log n \cdot \log\log \Delta)$, where $n$ is the number of links and $\Delta$ is the ratio between the longest and the shortest link length. Under the natural assumption that lengths are represented in binary, this gives the first approximation ratio that is polylogarithmic in the size of the input. The algorithm has the desirable property of using an oblivious power assignment, where the power assigned to a sender depends only on the length of the link. We give evidence that this dependence on $\Delta$ is unavoidable, showing that any reasonably-behaving oblivious power assignment results in a $\Omega(\log\log \Delta)$-approximation. These results hold also for the (weighted) capacity problem of finding a maximum (weighted) subset of links that can be scheduled in a single time slot. In addition, we obtain improved approximation for a bidirectional variant of the scheduling problem, give partial answers to questions about the utility of graphs for modeling physical interference, and generalize the setting from the standard 2-dimensional Euclidean plane to doubling metrics. Finally, we explore the utility of graph models in capturing wireless interference.


💡 Research Summary

The paper tackles the fundamental problem of jointly scheduling arbitrary wireless links and assigning transmission powers under the physical SINR (Signal‑to‑Interference‑plus‑Noise Ratio) model. Given n links, each defined by a sender‑receiver pair and a distance (link length), the goal is to partition the links into the smallest possible number of time slots and to choose a power level for each sender such that every link in a slot satisfies the SINR inequality
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