Abstract

In wireless networks, distance variations caused by node mobility generate fluctuations of the channel gains. Such fluctuations can be treated as another type of fading besides multi-path effects. In this paper, we characterize the interference statistics in mobile random networks by mapping the distance variations of mobile nodes to the channel gain fluctuations. Network performance is evaluated in terms of the outage probability. A nearest-interferer approximation is employed. This approximation provides a tight lower bound on the outage probability. Comparing to a static network, we show that the interference distribution does not change under high mobility and random walk models, but random waypoint mobility increases interference.

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