Title
Navigating Ultrasmall Worlds In Ultrashort Time
Abstract
Random scale-free networks are ultrasmall worlds. The average length of the shortest paths in networks of size N scales as lnlnN. Here we show that these ultrasmall worlds can be navigated in ultrashort time. Greedy routing on scale-free networks embedded in metric spaces finds paths with the average length scaling also as lnlnN. Greedy routing uses only local information to navigate a network. Nevertheless, it finds asymptotically the shortest paths, a direct computation of which requires global topology knowledge. Our findings imply that the peculiar structure of complex networks ensures that the lack of global topological awareness has asymptotically no impact on the length of communication paths. These results have important consequences for communication systems such as the Internet, where maintaining knowledge of current topology is a major scalability bottleneck.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.058701
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Keywords
DocType
Volume
scale free network,communication system,metric space,length scale,shortest path,complex network
Journal
102
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
5
0031-9007
12
PageRank 
References 
Authors
1.28
0
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Marián Boguñá11117.39
Dmitri Krioukov2113890.70