Time Versus Cost Tradeoffs for Deterministic Rendezvous in Networks

Two mobile agents, starting from different nodes of a network at possibly different times, have to meet at the same node. This problem is known as . Agents move in synchronous rounds. Each agent has a distinct integer label from the set . Two main efficiency measures of rendezvous are its (the number of rounds until the meeting) and its (the total number of edge traversals). We investigate tradeoffs between these two measures. A natural benchmark for both time and cost of rendezvous in a network is the number of edge traversals needed for visiting all nodes of the network, called the exploration time. Hence we express the time and cost of rendezvous as functions of an upper bound on the time of exploration (where and a corresponding exploration procedure are known to both agents) and of the size of the label space. We present two natural rendezvous algorithms. Algorithm has cost (and, in fact, a version of this algorithm for the model where the agents start simultaneously has cost exactly ) and time . Algorithm has both time and cost . Our main contributions are lower bounds showing that, perhaps surprisingly, these two algorithms capture the tradeoffs between time and cost of rendezvous almost tightly. We show that any deterministic rendezvous algorithm of cost asymptotically (i.e., of cost ) must have time . On the other hand, we show that any deterministic rendezvous algorithm with time complexity must have cost .
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