The capacity scaling of extended two-dimensional wireless networks is known in the high attenuation regime, i.e. when the power path loss exponent α is greater than 4. This has been accomplished by deriving information theoretic upper bounds for this regime that match the corresponding lower bounds. On the contrary, not much is known in the so-called low attenuation regime when 2 ≤ α ≤ 4. (For one-dimensional networks, the uncharacterized regime is 1 ≤ α ≤ 2.5.) The dichotomy is due to the fact that while communication is highly power-limited in the first case and power-based arguments suffice to get tight upper bounds, the study of the low attenuation regime requires a more precise analysis of the degrees of freedom involved. In this paper...
We discover a new capacity scaling law in ultra-dense networks under practical system assumptions, s...
The present paper focuses on the problem of broadcasting information in the most efficient manner in...
We study the connectivity and capacity of finite area ad hoc wireless networks, with an increasing n...
Abstract—Wireless networks with a minimum inter-node sep-aration distance are studied where the sign...
In this paper, we characterize the information-theoretic capacity scaling of wireless ad hoc network...
Abstract—We study the scaling of the capacity per unit energy of a wireless network as a function of...
Abstract — We study the capacity region of a general wireless network by deriving fundamental upper ...
We establish lower bounds on the capacity of wireless ad hoc networks, which hold with probability a...
We consider networks consisting of nodes with radios, and without any wired infrastructure, thus nec...
In this paper we consider linear wireless networks with variable number of nodes. We first derive a...
We study the capacity of static wireless networks, both ad hoc and hybrid, under the Protocol and Ph...
Abstract—Motivated by the framework of network equivalence theory [1], [2], we present capacity lowe...
This work focuses on the throughput scaling laws of fading networks in the limit of large number of ...
In this thesis we are concerned with the problems of data transport in wireless networks. We study s...
Abstract. The throughput capacity of arbitrary wireless networks under the physical Signal to Inter-...
We discover a new capacity scaling law in ultra-dense networks under practical system assumptions, s...
The present paper focuses on the problem of broadcasting information in the most efficient manner in...
We study the connectivity and capacity of finite area ad hoc wireless networks, with an increasing n...
Abstract—Wireless networks with a minimum inter-node sep-aration distance are studied where the sign...
In this paper, we characterize the information-theoretic capacity scaling of wireless ad hoc network...
Abstract—We study the scaling of the capacity per unit energy of a wireless network as a function of...
Abstract — We study the capacity region of a general wireless network by deriving fundamental upper ...
We establish lower bounds on the capacity of wireless ad hoc networks, which hold with probability a...
We consider networks consisting of nodes with radios, and without any wired infrastructure, thus nec...
In this paper we consider linear wireless networks with variable number of nodes. We first derive a...
We study the capacity of static wireless networks, both ad hoc and hybrid, under the Protocol and Ph...
Abstract—Motivated by the framework of network equivalence theory [1], [2], we present capacity lowe...
This work focuses on the throughput scaling laws of fading networks in the limit of large number of ...
In this thesis we are concerned with the problems of data transport in wireless networks. We study s...
Abstract. The throughput capacity of arbitrary wireless networks under the physical Signal to Inter-...
We discover a new capacity scaling law in ultra-dense networks under practical system assumptions, s...
The present paper focuses on the problem of broadcasting information in the most efficient manner in...
We study the connectivity and capacity of finite area ad hoc wireless networks, with an increasing n...