Abstract: The rules for preparing the manuscripts for the International Journals (IJ) and International Book Series
(IBS) of the ITHEA International Scientific Society (ITHEA ISS) are outlined. We study mobile communication of
networks, the ad hoc networks, Ad hoc networks are complex distributed systems that consist of wireless mobile
or static nodes that can freely and dynamically self-organize. The parameter of the queuing models depends on
the node mobility pattern.
The main finding is that the expected relay buffer size depends on the expectation and the variance of the nodes
contact time. Such analysis is done for the three dimensional random walks models over a circle; expected relay
buffer size depends on the expectation and the variance of the nodes contact time.
First model-The source node transmits a packet only once (either to the relay or to the destination node). Thus,
the source node does not keep a copy of the packet once it has been sent. When the source node transmits a
packet to the destination node (when their locations permit such a transmission), the source node transmits
packets that it has not transmitted before. The source node has always data to send to the destination node. This
is a standard assumption, also made in GMPS04, GT02, GK00, because we are interested in the maximum
relay throughput of the relay node. This shows: the first relay node performs a Random walk and the source and
destination are fixed, second the source, the destination, and the relay node move inside a square according to
the RD model. Second model-The relay node is moving according to a symmetric random walk (RW) on a circle
of 4R + 2w steps.
Third model - Three nodes: a source a destination and a relay source, nodes are moving a cording a symmetrical
Random Walk over a circle.
Keywords: Ad Hoc Networks, MANETs protocols, Routing protocols, packet, source node, Relay routing, finite
memory, Relay Buffer (RB), RB occupancy, Destination.
Link:
THREE RD MODELS FOR TWO-HOP RELAY ROUTING WITH LIMITED PACKETS
LIFETIME IN AD HOC NETWORKS
Irma Aslanishvili
http://www.foibg.com/ijima/vol03/ijima03-03-p09.pdf