Abstract:
Sensor network with mobile access (SENMA) is an architecture in which randomly deployed low-power sensors are orchestrated by a few powerful mobile access points (APs). T...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
Sensor network with mobile access (SENMA) is an architecture in which randomly deployed low-power sensors are orchestrated by a few powerful mobile access points (APs). This paper considers SENMA from energy-efficiency and information-theoretic perspectives. By allowing sensors to propagate data directly to mobile APs over multiaccess channels, and relieving sensors from energy-consuming network functions, SENMA has the potential of offering orders of magnitude of improvement in energy efficiency over the multihop ad hoc architecture, as demonstrated by our analysis on scalability. Optimization configurations of SENMA such as the altitude, the trajectory, and the coverage of APs are considered next, using the sum-rate as the performance metric. Optimal strategies for single and multiple APs are determined. For multiple APs, the possibility of and the gain due to cooperation (i.e., joint decoding of signals received at different APs) are investigated
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Communications ( Volume: 54, Issue: 11, November 2006)