Sparse Relaxed Broadcast Graphs
Abstract
Broadcasting in graphs refers to the information dissemination problem in which a source node has an atomic piece of information to be distributed to all the nodes of a graph. In the standard telephone model, broadcasting proceeds as a sequence of synchronous rounds, where, at each round, every informed node can transfer the information to at most one of its neighbors. The broadcast time of a graph G is the maximum, taken over every node v∈ V(G), of the minimum number of rounds required for broadcasting from v in G. We study the network design problem that, for every ε> 0, asks for the minimum number of edges of n-node graphs with broadcast time close to optimal, i.e., at most (1+ε)2n. Let ϕ=(1+5)/2 be the golden ratio, and let α=1/2ϕ-1 0.44. We show that, for every n≥ 1, and for every ε∈(0,α), it suffices to add O(n1-ε/α) edges to a well chosen n-node tree for designing an n-node graph with broadcast time (1+ε)2n. This asymptotic bound on the additional number of edges improves the previsouly known bound O(n1-ε), and has implications to the design of graphs with minimum broadcast cost, defined as number of edges times broadcast time. Moreover, we show that, for infinitely many values of n, Ω(n) edges must be added to some tree for designing an n-node graph with broadcast time 2 n+1. Therefore, our bound O(n1-ε/α) on the additional number of edges for 0<ε<α is asymptotically tight at the two extremities of the interval (0,α], as it is O(n) when ε 0, and O(1) when ε=α. Finally, we show that, for every n, there exists an n-node graph with broadcast time 2 n+1 and at most 2n-42n+O(1) edges.
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