Distributed Forest Fire Monitoring Using Wireless Sensor Networks
Author(s) -
M. Ángeles Serna,
Rafael Casado,
Aurelio Bermúdez,
Nuno Pereira,
Stefano Tennina
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of distributed sensor networks
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.324
H-Index - 53
eISSN - 1550-1477
pISSN - 1550-1329
DOI - 10.1155/2015/964564
Subject(s) - computer science , overhead (engineering) , wireless sensor network , set (abstract data type) , distributed computing , firefighting , representation (politics) , fire detection , focus (optics) , node (physics) , convex hull , wireless network , wireless , regular polygon , computer network , real time computing , telecommunications , geometry , mathematics , law , chemistry , structural engineering , optics , engineering , operating system , political science , thermodynamics , programming language , physics , organic chemistry , politics
Disaster management is one of the most relevant application fields of wireless sensor networks. In this application, the role of the sensor network usually consists of obtaining a representation or a model of a physical phenomenon spreading through the affected area. In this work we focus on forest firefighting operations, proposing three fully distributed ways for approximating the actual shape of the fire. In the simplest approach, a circular burnt area is assumed around each node that has detected the fire and the union of these circles gives the overall fire’s shape. However, as this approach makes an intensive use of the wireless sensor network resources, we have proposed to incorporate two in-network aggregation techniques, which do not require considering the complete set of fire detections. The first technique models the fire by means of a complex shape composed of multiple convex hulls representing different burning areas, while the second technique uses a set of arbitrary polygons. Performance evaluation of realistic fire models on computer simulations reveals that the method based on arbitrary polygons obtains an improvement of 20% in terms of accuracy of the fire shape approximation, reducing the overhead in-network resources to 10% in the best case
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