We consider a swarm of robots in \mathbb{R}^d. The robots are oblivious, disoriented (no common coordinate system/compass), and have limited visibility (observe other robots up to a constant distance). The basic formation task gathering requires that all robots reach the same, not predefined position. In the related near-gathering task, they must reach distinct positions such that every robot sees the entire swarm. In the considered setting, gathering can be solved in synchronous rounds both in two and three dimensions, where denotes the initial maximal distance of two robots. In this work, we formalize a key property of efficient gathering protocols and use it to define -contracting protocols. Any such protocol gathers robots in the -dimensional space in synchronous rounds. Moreover, we prove a corresponding lower bound stating that any protocol in which robots move to target points inside of the local convex hulls of their neighborhoods -- -contracting protocols have this property -- requires rounds to gather all robots. Among others, we prove that the -dimensional generalization of the GtC-protocol is -contracting. Remarkably, our improved and generalized runtime bound is independent of and . The independence of answers an open research question. We also introduce an approach to make any -contracting protocol collisionfree to solve near-gathering. The resulting protocols maintain the runtime of and work even in the semi-synchronous model.
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