TY - GEN
T1 - On the Computational Power of Energy-Constrained Mobile Robots: Algorithms and Cross-Model Analysis
AU - Buchin, Kevin
AU - Flocchini, Paola
AU - Kostitsyna, Irina
AU - Peters, Tom
AU - Santoro, Nicola
AU - Wada, Koichi
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - We consider distributed systems of identical autonomous computational entities, called robots, moving and operating in the plane in synchronous Look - Compute - Move (LCM ) cycles. The algorithmic capabilities of these systems have been extensively investigated in the literature under four distinct models (OBLOT, FSTA, FCOM, LUMI ), each identifying different levels of memory persistence and communication capabilities of the robots. Despite their differences, they all always assume that robots have unlimited amounts of energy. In this paper, we remove this assumption and start the study of the computational capabilities of robots whose energy is limited, albeit renewable. We first study the impact that memory persistence and communication capabilities have on the computational power of such energy-constrained systems of robots; we do so by analyzing the computational relationship between the four models under this energy constraint. We provide a complete characterization of this relationship. We then study the difference in computational power caused by the energy restriction and provide a complete characterization of the relationship between energy-constrained and unrestricted robots in each model. We prove that within LUMI there is no difference; an integral part of the proof is the design and analysis of an algorithm that in LUMI allows energy-constrained robots to execute correctly any protocol for robots with unlimited energy. We then show the (apparently counterintuitive) result that in all other models, the energy constraint actually provides the robots with a computational advantage.
AB - We consider distributed systems of identical autonomous computational entities, called robots, moving and operating in the plane in synchronous Look - Compute - Move (LCM ) cycles. The algorithmic capabilities of these systems have been extensively investigated in the literature under four distinct models (OBLOT, FSTA, FCOM, LUMI ), each identifying different levels of memory persistence and communication capabilities of the robots. Despite their differences, they all always assume that robots have unlimited amounts of energy. In this paper, we remove this assumption and start the study of the computational capabilities of robots whose energy is limited, albeit renewable. We first study the impact that memory persistence and communication capabilities have on the computational power of such energy-constrained systems of robots; we do so by analyzing the computational relationship between the four models under this energy constraint. We provide a complete characterization of this relationship. We then study the difference in computational power caused by the energy restriction and provide a complete characterization of the relationship between energy-constrained and unrestricted robots in each model. We prove that within LUMI there is no difference; an integral part of the proof is the design and analysis of an algorithm that in LUMI allows energy-constrained robots to execute correctly any protocol for robots with unlimited energy. We then show the (apparently counterintuitive) result that in all other models, the energy constraint actually provides the robots with a computational advantage.
KW - Comparison of models
KW - Energy-constrained robots
KW - Luminous robots
KW - Oblivious robots
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134349492&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-09993-9_3
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-09993-9_3
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 978-3-031-09993-9
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)
SP - 42
EP - 61
BT - Structural Information and Communication Complexity - 29th International Colloquium, SIROCCO 2022, Proceedings
A2 - Parter, Merav
PB - Springer
CY - Cham
ER -