Global synchronization of pulse-coupled oscillators on trees (1604.08381v6)
Abstract: Consider a distributed network on a finite simple graph $G=(V,E)$ with diameter $d$ and maximum degree $\Delta$, where each node has a phase oscillator revolving on $S{1}=\mathbb{R}/\mathbb{Z}$ with unit speed. Pulse-coupling is a class of distributed time evolution rule for such networked phase oscillators inspired by biological oscillators, which depends only upon event-triggered local pulse communications. In this paper, we propose a novel inhibitory pulse-coupling and prove that arbitrary phase configuration on $G$ synchronizes by time $51d$ if $G$ is a tree and $\Delta \le 3$. We extend this pulse-coupling by letting each oscillator throttle the input according to an auxiliary state variable. We show that the resulting adaptive pulse-coupling synchronizes arbitrary initial configuration on $G$ by time $83d$ if $G$ is a tree. As an application, we obtain a universal randomized distributed clock synchronization algorithm, which uses $O(\log \Delta)$ memory per node and converges on any $G$ with expected worst case running time of $O(|V|+(d{5}+\Delta{2})\log |V|)$.