DocumentCode :
2997019
Title :
SENS: a sensor, environment and network simulator
Author :
Sundresh, Sameer ; Kim, Wooyoung ; Agha, Gul
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
fYear :
2004
fDate :
18-22 April 2004
Firstpage :
221
Lastpage :
228
Abstract :
Recent advances in microelectromechanical systems and VLSI lithography have enabled the miniaturization of sensors and controllers. Such minitiarization facilitates the deployment of large-scale wireless sensor networks (WSNs). However, the considerable cost of deploying and maintaining large-scale WSNs for experimental purposes makes simulation useful in developing dependable and portable WSN applications. SENS is a customizable sensor network simulator for WSN applications, consisting of interchangeable and extensible components for applications, network communication, and the physical environment. Multiple component implementations in SENS offer varying degrees of realism. Users can assemble application-specific environments; such environments are modeled in SENS by their different signal propagation characteristics. The same source code that is executed on simulated sensor nodes in SENS may also be deployed on actual sensor nodes; this enables application portability. Furthermore, SENS provides diagnostic facilities such as power utilization analysis for development of dependable applications. We validate and demonstrate usability of these capabilities through analyzing two simple WSN services.
Keywords :
VLSI; micromechanical devices; mobile communication; performance evaluation; sensor fusion; wireless sensor networks; SENS; VLSI lithography; WSN applications; application portability; application-specific environments; controller miniaturization; customizable sensor network simulator; environment simulator; extensible components; interchangeable components; large-scale wireless sensor networks; microelectromechanical systems; multiple component implementations; network communication; power utilization analysis; sensor miniaturization; sensor nodes; sensor simulator; signal propagation; Assembly; Control systems; Costs; Large-scale systems; Lithography; Microelectromechanical systems; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Sensor systems; Very large scale integration; Wireless sensor networks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Simulation Symposium, 2004. Proceedings. 37th Annual
ISSN :
1080-241X
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2110-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SIMSYM.2004.1299486
Filename :
1299486
Link To Document :
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