Abstract
In a seminal paper, Bar-Yehuda et al. (1992) considered broadcasting in radio networks whose nodes know only their own label and labels of their neighbors. They claimed a linear lower bound on the time of deterministic broadcasting in such radio networks, by constructing a class of graphs of diameter 3, with the property that every broadcasting algorithm requires linear time on one of these graphs. Due to a subtle error in the argument, this result is incorrect. We construct an algorithm that broadcasts in logarithmic time on all graphs from the work of Bar-Yehuda et al. Moreover, we show how to broadcast in sublinear time on all n-node graphs of diameter o(log log n). On the other hand, we construct a class of graphs of diameter 4, such that every broadcasting algorithm requires time /spl Omega/(4/spl radic/n) on one of these graphs. In view of the randomized algorithm, running in expected time O(D log n + log/sup 2/ n) on all n-node graphs of diameter D, our lower bound gives the first correct proof of an exponential gap between determinism and randomization in the time of radio broadcasting.
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