Abstract

Low orbit satellite constellation as a relay network provides a possible solution for remote real-time data gathering applications, in which freshness information updates will be forwarded via dynamical intersatellite links (ISLs). Modeling by a time-varying network, this article studies minimizing Age of Information (AoI) of delivering the data through a multihop path, in particular, focusing on the effect of frequent interruptions of ISLs. Subjected to two constraints of path and effective arrival rate, the minimizing AoI problem is formulated to find a pair of optimal transmission delay and arrival rate. In particular, the <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$\mathcal {H}$ </tex-math></inline-formula> -approximate optimal algorithm, called a latest update routing (LUR) algorithm, is proposed with a well-designed continuous time-varying graph. Using LUR, a set of paths can be obtained with degraded transmission delay that satisfies a given arrival rate. By screening all the arrival rates satisfying the effective constraint, the maximum rate and a corresponding path set that minimizes age can be found. The simulation results verified that a degraded average AoI can be obtained by the proposed path selection mechanism compared with the typical shortest delay path (SDP) strategy, minimum spanning tree (MST) strategy, and MAoIG. In particular, the numerical findings show that the proposed LUR reduces average AoI by a maximum of 12.66% compared with SDP, 75.28% compared with MST, and 69.3% compared with MAoIG, respectively, under different scenarios.

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