Title :
Internet of Things as a Methodological Concept
Author :
Bari, Nazhad ; Mani, G. ; Berkovich, Simon
Author_Institution :
George Washington Univ., Washington, DC, USA
Abstract :
Nowadays, we are witnessing formation of a new technological marvel: Internet of Things. This construction is able to combine in a particular operational entity all the bits and pieces of the world around us. Thus, why could not this unique establishment present the long-sought essence in the Nature of Things? The two pillars of modern fundamental science-relativity and quantum mechanics-are just approximate descriptions of some properties of such a constructive possibility. The machinery of the physical world develops on a cellular automaton model employing as the transformation rule the mechanism of distributed mutual synchronization with the property of fault-tolerance. This infrastructure yields traveling wave solutions that exactly correspond to the spectrum of the stable elementary particles of matter with an upper bound on the propagation speed. On top of the considered cellular automaton infrastructure there appears a secondary formation that constitutes the mechanism of the Holographic Universe that is the basis for the Internet of Things. The holographic activities determine all the quantum mechanics properties of the physical world including the nonlocality entanglement. For living systems the arrangement of the Internet of Things elucidates the most puzzling biological capability of morphogenesis that otherwise cannot find any reasonable explanation. In this paper, we present the world view of internet of things and the application of this methodology from geospatial computing to physics. We give specific details on applying IoT concept to geospatial analysis in various fields from agriculture to medicine. We also provide detailed analysis of the profound impact of internet of things on our physical world which is a vital knowledge when it comes to geospatial research. We present calendar variation of quantum world which can be used for geospatial data gathering by fine tuning the equipment based on the time of the year.
Keywords :
Internet of Things; geophysics computing; quantum entanglement; Internet of Things; IoT; Nature of Things; cellular automaton model; distributed mutual synchronization mechanism; fault-tolerance property; fundamental science-relativity; geospatial analysis; geospatial computing; geospatial data gathering; holographic universe mechanism; nonlocality entanglement; propagation speed; quantum mechanics properties; stable elementary particles; upper bound; Context; Data handling; Geospatial analysis; Information management; Internet; Microwave theory and techniques; Quantum mechanics; Internet of Things (IoT); cosmic microwave background; geospatial IoT; holographic mechanism;
Conference_Titel :
Computing for Geospatial Research and Application (COM.Geo), 2013 Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
DOI :
10.1109/COMGEO.2013.8