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A drift-tolerant model for data management in ocean sensor networks
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International Workshop on Data Engineering for Wireless and Mobile Access archive
Proceedings of the 6th ACM international workshop on Data engineering for wireless and mobile access table of contents
Beijing, China
SESSION: Mobile data management table of contents
Pages: 49 - 58  
Year of Publication: 2007
ISBN:978-1-59593-765-0
Authors
Silvia Nittel  University of Maine
Niki Trigoni  University of Oxford
Konstantinos Ferentinos  Agricultural University of Athens
Francois Neville  University of Maine
Arda Nural  University of Maine
Neal Pettigrew  University of Maine
Sponsors
SIGMOD: ACM Special Interest Group on Management of Data
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Traditional means of observing the ocean, like fixed mooring stations and radar systems, are difficult and expensive to deploy and provide coarse-grained and data measurements of currents and waves. In this paper, we explore the use of inexpensive wireless drifters as an alternative flexible infrastructure for fine-grained ocean monitoring. Surface drifters are designed specifically to move passively with the flow of water on the ocean surface and they are able to acquire sensor readings and GPS-generated positions at regular intervals. We view the fleet of drifters as a wireless ad-hoc sensor network with two types of nodes:i) a few powerful drifters with satellite connectivity, acting as mobile base-stations, and ii)a large number of low-power drifters with short-range acoustic or radio connectivity. Using real datasets from the Gulf of Maine (US) and the Liverpool Bay (UK), we study connectivity and uniformity properties of the ad-hoc mobile sensor network. We investigate the effect of deployment strategy, weather conditions as well as seasonal changes on the ability of drifters to relay readings to the end-users,and to provide sufficient sensing coverage of the monitored area. Our empirical study provides useful insights on how to design distributed routing and in-network processing algorithms tailored for ocean-monitoring sensor networks.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Silvia Nittel: colleagues
Niki Trigoni: colleagues
Konstantinos Ferentinos: colleagues
Francois Neville: colleagues
Arda Nural: colleagues
Neal Pettigrew: colleagues