2016
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-662-53426-7_1
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Fast Two-Robot Disk Evacuation with Wireless Communication

Abstract: In the fast evacuation problem, we study the path planning problem for two robots who want to minimize the worst-case evacuation time on the unit disk. The robots are initially placed at the center of the disk. In order to evacuate, they need to reach an unknown point, the exit, on the boundary of the disk. Once one of the robots finds the exit, it will instantaneously notify the other agent, who will make a beeline to it.The problem has been studied for robots with the same speed [12]. We study a more general… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
(26 reference statements)
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“…Search and evacuation problems with faulty robots have been studied in [22,38,49] and with probabilistically faulty robots in [13]. Variations pertaining to the searcher's speeds appeared in [36,37] (immobile agents), in [44] (speed bounds) and in [26] (terrain dependent speeds). Search for multiple exits was considered in [28,50], while variation of searching with advice appeared in [40].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Search and evacuation problems with faulty robots have been studied in [22,38,49] and with probabilistically faulty robots in [13]. Variations pertaining to the searcher's speeds appeared in [36,37] (immobile agents), in [44] (speed bounds) and in [26] (terrain dependent speeds). Search for multiple exits was considered in [28,50], while variation of searching with advice appeared in [40].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the inception of 2 EVAC F2F in [1], numerous search and evacuation-type variants have emerged that studied different robot specs and/or number of searchers, different communication models, and different domains. Some notable examples include search and/or evacuation in the disk with more than 1 exits [29,30], in triangles [31,32], on multiple rays [33], in graphs [34,35], on a line with at least two robots [36,37] (generalizing the seminal result of [38]), with faulty robots [39][40][41] or with probabilistically faulty robots [42], with advice (information) [43], with priority specification on the searchers [44,45], with immobile agents [46,47], with time/energy trade-off requirements [48,49], with speed bounds [50], and with terrain dependent speeds [51], just to name some. The interested reader may also see the recent survey [52] that elaborates more on some selected topics.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Czyzowicz et al [20] and Pattanayak et al [11] consider evacuation with multiple exits and known positions of the exists relative to each other. Lamprou et al [18] consider two robots of different speeds. Regarding evacuation with more than two robots, Czyzowicz et al [13] study the setting with three robots, one of which may be faulty.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%