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Download CS647 - Advanced Topics in Wireless NetworksCS 647 1.1 CS647 - Advanced Topics in Wireless Networks Introduction – Part II Drs. Baruch Awerbuch & Amitabh Mishra Computer Science

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  • CS 647 1.1

    CS647 - Advanced Topics in Wireless Networks

    Introduction Part II

    Drs. Baruch Awerbuch & Amitabh MishraComputer Science Department

    Johns Hopkins University

  • CS 647 1.2

    A case for mobility many aspectsHistory of mobile communicationMarketWireless Networks

    Cellular NetworksAd hoc NetworksSensor Networks

    Areas of research

    Outline

  • CS 647 1.3

    Classical Mail Forwarding Technique?

    Baltimore Main Post Office

    JH Univ Post Office

    Mail from the world

    Baltimore JH Univ

  • CS 647 1.4

    Ideal cell area (2-10 km radius)

    Fundamentals of Cellular Systems

    Illustration of a cell with a mobile station and a base station

    BS

    MS

    CellMS

    Alternative shape of a cell Hexagonal cell area used in most models

  • CS 647 1.5

    Control and Traffic Channels

    Base Station (BS)

    Forwa

    rd (do

    wnlink

    )

    contro

    l chann

    el

    Mobile Host (MH)

    Rever

    se (upl

    ink) co

    ntrol c

    hannel

    Forwa

    rd (do

    wnlink

    ) traff

    ic chan

    nel

    Rever

    se (upl

    ink) tr

    affic c

    hannel

  • CS 647 1.6

    PSTNMS

    HomeMobile

    Switching Center

    HLR Home network

    Visitingarea

    Caller

    VisitingMobile

    Switching Center

    VLR

    MS

    1

    Location update request Using Bacon Signals

    Update location Info. sent to HLR

    2

    Automatic Location Update

    Baltimore

    JHU

  • CS 647 1.7

    PSTN

    MS

    homeMobile

    Switching Center

    HLR Home Network

    VisitingArea

    Caller

    Mobile Switching

    Center

    VLR

    Automatic Call Forwarding using HLR-VLR

    1 Call sent to home location

    2Home MSC checksHLR; gets current location of MSin visiting area

    3

    Home MSC forwardscall to visiting MSC

    4

    MSC in visiting area sendscall to BS and connects MS

    Baltimore

    JHU

  • CS 647 1.8

    Call Setup from MH (Cell Phone) to BS?

    BS MS

    1. Need to establish path

    2. Frequency/time slot/code assigned(FDMA/TDMA/CDMA)

    3. Control Information Acknowledgement4. Start communication

  • CS 647 1.9

    Mobility and Handoff

    BSi

    Signal strength due to BSi

    X2MS

    X4

    Pmin

    Pi(x)

    E

    Signal strength due to BSj

    X1 X3 X5 XthBSj

    Pj(x)

    By looking at the variation of signal strength from either base station it is possible to decide on the optimum area where handoff can take place

  • CS 647 1.10

    Handoff Scenarios with Different Mobility Locations

    PSTN

    Paging Area 1

    MSC2

    c

    MSC3

    d

    MSC4

    Paging Area 2

    e

    MS

    MSC1

    a b

  • CS 647 1.11

    A case for mobility many aspectsHistory of mobile communicationMarketWireless Networks

    Cellular NetworksAd hoc NetworksSensor Networks

    Areas of research

    Outline

  • CS 647 1.12

    MANETs: Mobile Ad hoc Networks

    Applications: Military applications (battlefield), disaster situations, etc.

    Collection of wireless mobile nodes dynamically forming a distributed network without any pre-existing infrastructure

    From DARPA Website

  • CS 647 1.13

    An autonomous system of nodes (MHs) connected by wireless links

    Lack of fixed infrastructure relays

    Absence of centralized authority

    Peer-to-peer connectivity Multi-hop forwarding to ensure network connectivity

    Topology may change dynamically

    Random Multi-hop Graph

    Energy-constrained

    Bandwidth-constrained, variable capacity links

    Mobile Ad Hoc Networks - Characteristics:

  • CS 647 1.14

    Mobile Ad Hoc Network (MANET)

  • CS 647 1.15

    Applications of MANETsDefense applications: On-the-fly communication set up for soldiers on the ground, fighter planes in the air, etc.

    Crisis-management applications: Natural disasters, where the entire communication infrastructure is in disarray

    Tele-medicine: Paramedic assisting a victim at a remote location can access medical records, can get video conference assistance from a surgeon for an emergency intervention

    Tele-Geoprocessing applications: Combines geographical information system, GPS and high capacity MS, Queries dependent of locationinformation of the users, and environmental monitoring using sensors

    Virtual navigation: A remote database contains geographical representation of streets, buildings, and characteristics of large metropolis and blocks of this data is transmitted in rapid sequence to a vehicle to visualize needed environment ahead of time

    Education via the internet: Educational opportunities on Internet to K-12 students and other interested individuals and it is possible to have last-mile wireless Internet access

  • CS 647 1.16

    A case for mobility many aspectsHistory of mobile communicationMarketWireless Networks

    Cellular NetworksAd hoc NetworksSensor Networks

    Areas of research

    Outline

  • CS 647 1.17

    Embedded Networked Sensing

    Micro-sensors, on-board processing, and wireless interfaces all feasible at very small scale

    can monitor phenomena up close

    Will enable spatially and temporally denseenvironmental monitoringEmbedded Networked Sensing will reveal previously unobservable phenomena

    Seismic Structure response

    Contaminant Transport

    Marine Microorganisms

    Ecosystems, Biocomplexity

  • CS 647 1.18

    Example use of a Sensor Network

    Measuring pollutant concentration

    Pass on information to monitoring station

    Predict current location of pollutant contour based on various parameters

    Take corrective action

    Pollutants monitored by sensors in the river

    Sensors report to the base monitoring station

    ST

  • CS 647 1.19

    Wireless Sensor Networks Architecture

    Sensor Field

    Internet & Satellite

    Sensor Node

    C

    Task ManagerNode

    SINK

    A

    D

    B

    User

  • CS 647 1.20

    Portable and self-sustained (power, communication, intelligence)Capable of embedded complex data processingNote: Power consumed in transmitting 1Kb data over 100m is equivalent to executing 30M Instructions on 10MIPS processorTechnology trends predict small memory footprint may not be a limitation in future sensor nodesEquipped with multiple sensing, programmable computing and communication capability

    What is a Sensor and a Sensor Network?

    Transceiver

    Embedded Processor

    Sensor

    Battery

    Memory

    Transceiver

    Embedded Processor

    Sensor

    Battery

    Memory

    1Kbps- 1Mbps3m - 300m

    Lossy Transmission

    8 bit, 10 MHzSlow Computation

    Limited LifetimeRequires

    SupervisionMultiple sensors

    128Kb - 1MbLimited Storage

  • CS 647 1.21

    Sensors and Wireless Radio

    Types of sensors: -Pressure,-Temperature-Light-Biological-Chemical-Strain, fatigue-Tilt

    Capable of surviving harsh environments (heat, humidity, corrosion, pollution, radiation, etc)

    Could be deployed in large numbers

    Wireless Wireless RadioRadio

    SensorsSensors

  • CS 647 1.22

    Wireless Sensor NetworksWireless sensor networks are a collection of tiny disposable and low power devices

    A sensor node is a device that converts a sensed attribute (e.g. temperature, vibration) into a form understandable by users

    Wireless sensor networks have been used for years for a number of applications

    The number of sensors can be large to cover as much area as desirable

    Sensor networks are usually unattended and some degree of fault-tolerance needed

  • CS 647 1.23

    Characteristics of Wireless Sensor Networks

    Advantages:Ease of deploymentExtended rangeFault toleranceMobility (some)

    Limitations:Low-bandwidthError-prone transmissionsNeed for collision-free channel accessLimited amount of energy availableUsually sensors placed where it is difficult to replace their batteries

  • CS 647 1.24

    Areas of research in mobile communication

    Wireless Communicationtransmission quality (bandwidth, error rate, delay)modulation, coding, interferencemedia access, regulations...

    Mobilitylocation dependent serviceslocation transparencyquality of service support (delay, jitter, security)Routing...

    Portabilitypower consumptionlimited computing power, sizes of display, ...

    Security..