Title :
Autonomous Reconfiguration in Free-Space Optical Sensor Networks
Author :
Desai, Aniket ; Milner, Stuart
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Civil & Environ. Eng., Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
Abstract :
This research focuses on the physical and logical control and reconfigurability of network topologies through intelligent and dynamic rearrangement of nodes in an optical wireless sensor network. We address high data rate sensor networks (e.g., infrastructure monitoring; surveillance), which consist of gigabit per second, narrow beam, free-space optical links between fixed and/or mobile nodes. In our approach, the seamless operation of such networks requires maintenance of wireless link connectivity and quality and at all times, amidst, for example, changing atmospheric, and traffic and platform conditions. This is achieved by dynamic reconfiguration through topology control. We address the problem of dynamic formulation of topologies, which contain only two transceivers per communications node or switch. The task of reconfiguration requires the formation of a biconnected graph or a ring topology. The problem is similar to the traveling salesman problem and is NP complete. We address the mixed integer programming formulation of this problem, and show that it does not scale even for a small network. We then focus on heuristics for dynamic, autonomous reconfiguration. Using simulations, we investigate tradeoff between solution quality and computational time. We also investigate the effectiveness of these dynamic reconfiguration heuristics compared to fixed, degraded topologies.
Keywords :
computational complexity; graph theory; integer programming; mobile communication; optical links; telecommunication congestion control; telecommunication network topology; telecommunication traffic; transceivers; wireless sensor networks; FSO; NP complete; biconnected graph; congestion minimization; dynamic autonomous reconfiguration; free-space optical link; intelligent node rearrangement; logical control; mixed integer programming; mobile node; network topology control; network traffic; optical wireless sensor network; physical control; transceiver; traveling salesman problem; wireless link connectivity; Intelligent networks; Intelligent sensors; Network topology; Optical beams; Optical control; Optical fiber networks; Optical sensors; Surveillance; Switches; Wireless sensor networks; Autonomous reconfiguration; congestion minimization; free-space optical (FSO) sensor networks;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2005.852183