coverage is determined for each interval defined by two successive points. The
maximum level of coverage is equal to the number of overlapping arcs. For
example, between~$5L$ and~$6L$ the maximum level of coverage is equal to $3$
-(the value is highlighted in yellow at the bottom of Figure~\ref{figure2}), which
+(the value is given at the bottom of Figure~\ref{figure2}), which
means that at most 2~neighbors can cover the perimeter in addition to node $0$.
Table~\ref{my-label} summarizes for each coverage interval the maximum level of
coverage and the sensor nodes covering the perimeter. The example discussed
sensor-testbed to evaluate it in real world applications.
\subsection*{Acknowledgments}
-The authors are deeply grateful to the anonymous reviewers for their
-constructive advice, which improved the technical quality of the paper. As a
-Ph.D. student, Ali Kadhum Idrees would like to gratefully acknowledge the
-University of Babylon - Iraq for financial support and Campus France for the
-received support. This work is also partially funded by the Labex ACTION program
+Ali Kadhum Idrees' PhD thesis is financially supported in part by University of Babylon (Iraq).
+This work is also partially funded by the Labex ACTION program
(contract ANR-11-LABX-01-01).
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