barrier coverage with wireless sensors

25
Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors Santosh Kumar, Ten H. Lai, Anish Arora The Ohio State University Presented at Mobicom 2005

Upload: corin

Post on 20-Feb-2016

90 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors. Santosh Kumar, Ten H. Lai, Anish Arora The Ohio State University Presented at Mobicom 2005. Barrier Coverage. USA. Belt Region. Two special belt regions. Rectangular: Donut-shaped:. How to define a belt region?. Parallel curves - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Santosh Kumar, Ten H. Lai, Anish Arora

The Ohio State University

Presented at Mobicom 2005

Page 2: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Barrier Coverage

USA

Page 3: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Belt Region

Page 4: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Two special belt regions

Rectangular:

Donut-shaped:

Page 5: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

How to define a belt region?

Parallel curves Region between two parallel curves

Page 6: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Crossing Paths

A crossing path is a path that crosses the complete width of the belt region.

Crossing paths Not crossing paths

Page 7: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

k-Covered

A crossing path is said to be k-covered if it intersects the sensing disks of at least k sensors.

3-covered 1-covered 0-covered

Page 8: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

k-Barrier Covered

A belt region is k-barrier covered if all crossing paths are k-covered.

1-barrier covered

Not barrier covered

Page 9: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Barrier vs. Blanket Coverage Barrier coverage

Every crossing path is k-covered Blanket coverage

Every point is covered (or k-covered) Blanket coverage Barrier coverage

1-barrier covered but not 1-blanket covered

Page 10: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Question 1

Given a belt region deployed with sensors Is it k-barrier covered?

Is it 4-barrier covered?

Page 11: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Reduced to k-connectivity problem Given a sensor network over a belt region Construct a coverage graph G(V, E)

V: sensor nodes, plus two dummy nodes L, RE: edge (u,v) if their sensing disks overlap

Region is k-barrier covered iff L and R are k-connected in G.

L R

Page 12: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Be Careful!

Assumption:

If D1 ∩ D2 ≠ Φ, then (D1 U D2) ∩ B is connected.

Page 13: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Global algorithm for testing k-barrier coverage

Given a sensor network Construct a coverage graph Using existing algorithms

To test k-connectivity between two nodes

Question: what about donut-shaped regions? Question: can it be done locally?

Page 14: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Is it k-barrier covered? Still an open problem for donut-shaped

regions.

Page 15: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Is it k-barrier covered? Cannot be determined locally k-barrier covered iff k red sensors exist

In contrast, it can be locally determined if a region is not k-blanket covered.

Page 16: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Question 2

Assuming sensors can be placed at desired locationsWhat is the minimum number of sensors to

achieve k-barrier coverage?k x L / (2R) sensors, deployed in k rows

Page 17: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Question 3 If sensors are deployed randomly

How many sensors are needed to achieve k-barrier coverage with high probability (whp)?

Desired are A sufficient condition to achieve barrier coverage whp A sufficient condition for non-barrier coverage whp Gap between the two conditions should be as small

as possible

Page 18: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Conjecture: critical condition for k-barrier coverage whp

If , then k-barrier covered whp

If , non-k-barrier covered whp

s1/s

Expected # of sensors in the r-neighborhood of path

r r

Page 19: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

k-barrier covered whp

k-barrier covered whp lim Pr( belt region is k-barrier covered ) = 1

not (k-barrier covered whp) lim Pr( belt region is k-barrier covered ) < 1

non-k-barrier covered whp lim Pr( belt region is not k-barrier covered ) = 1 lim Pr( belt region is k-barrier covered ) = 0

Page 20: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

L(p) = all crossing paths congruent to p

p

p

Page 21: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Weak Barrier Coverage

A belt region is k-barrier covered whp if

lim Pr(all crossing paths are k-covered) = 1or lim Pr( crossing paths p, L(p) is k-covered ) = 1

A belt region is weakly k-barrier covered whp if

crossing paths p, lim Pr( L(p) is k-covered ) = 1

Page 22: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Conjecture: critical condition for k-barrier coverage

If , then k-barrier covered whp

If , not k-barrier covered whp

What if the limit equals 1?

weakly

weakly

weak

Page 23: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Determining #Sensors to Deploy

Given: Length (l), Width (w), Sensing Range (R), and

Coverage Degree (k), To determine # sensors (n) to deploy, compute

s2 = l/wr = (R/w)*(1/s)Compute the minimum value of n such that

2nr/s ≥ log(n) + (k-1) log log(n) + √log log(n)

s1/s

Page 24: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Simulations

Using this formula to determine n, The n randomly deployed sensors

provide weak k-barrier coverage with probability ≥0.99.

They also provide k-barrier coverage with probability close to 0.99.

Page 25: Barrier Coverage With Wireless Sensors

Summary Barrier coverage

Basic results

Open problemsBlanket coverage: extensively studiedBarrier coverage: further research needed