How wireless queues benefit from motion: an analysis of the continuum between zero and infinite mobility

From MaRDI portal
Publication:6351985

arXiv2010.11749MaRDI QIDQ6351985FDOQ6351985

Nithin S. Ramesan, Francois Baccelli

Publication date: 22 October 2020

Abstract: This paper considers the time evolution of a queue that is embedded in a Poisson point process of moving wireless interferers. The queue is driven by an external arrival process and is subject to a time-varying service process that is a function of the SINR that it sees. Static configurations of interferers result in an infinite queue workload with positive probability. In contrast, a generic stability condition is established for the queue in the case where interferers possess any non-zero mobility that results in displacements that are both independent across interferers and oblivious to interferer positions. The proof leverages the mixing property of the Poisson point process. The effect of an increase in mobility on queueing metrics is also studied. Convex ordering tools are used to establish that faster moving interferers result in a queue workload that is smaller for the increasing-convex stochastic order. As a corollary, mean workload and mean delay decrease as network mobility increases. This stochastic ordering as a function of mobility is explained by establishing positive correlations between SINR level-crossing events at different time points, and by determining the autocorrelation function for interference and observing that it decreases with increasing mobility. System behaviour is empirically analyzed using discrete-event simulation and the performance of various mobility models is evaluated using heavy-traffic approximations.












This page was built for publication: How wireless queues benefit from motion: an analysis of the continuum between zero and infinite mobility

Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6351985)