Title :
Dynamic wake-up and topology maintenance protocols with spatiotemporal guarantees
Author :
Bhattacharya, Sangeeta ; Xing, Guoliang ; Lu, Chenyang ; Roman, Gruia-Catalin ; Chipara, Octav ; Harris, Brandon
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Washington Univ., St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract :
Many mission-critical applications require spatiotemporal data services for mobile users or objects. Examples include distributed object tracking and fire monitoring by firefighters. To support such applications, wireless sensor networks must satisfy a set of stringent spatiotemporal constraints despite having low network duty cycles and scarce resources. We have developed two new wake-up and topology maintenance protocols, directional tree maintenance (DTM) and omnidirectional tree creation (OTC), to support spatiotemporal services in mobile environments. A key feature of our protocols is that they provide robust spatiotemporal performance while maintaining low overhead and energy consumption. Our simulations showed that both DTM and OTC can successfully deliver over 85% of query results to a mobile user within desired spatiotemporal constraints, even when the sleep schedule is as long as 15 s, the user changes direction every minute, and the location error is as high as 10 m. The benefits of our protocols have been validated through theoretical analysis and empirical results on a testbed of Mica2 motes.
Keywords :
constraint theory; energy conservation; protocols; scheduling; spatiotemporal phenomena; telecommunication network topology; trees (mathematics); wireless sensor networks; DTM; Mica2 mote; OTC; directional tree maintenance; distributed object tracking; dynamic wake-up; energy consumption; error location; fire monitoring; mobile user; network duty cycle; omnidirectional tree creation; scarce resource; sleep schedule; spatiotemporal data service; stringent spatiotemporal constraint; topology maintenance protocol; wireless sensor network; Energy consumption; Fires; Mission critical systems; Monitoring; Network topology; Protocols; Robustness; Sleep; Spatiotemporal phenomena; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Information Processing in Sensor Networks, 2005. IPSN 2005. Fourth International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9201-9
DOI :
10.1109/IPSN.2005.1440888