DocumentCode
1763728
Title
Integration of satellite and LTE for disaster recovery
Author
Casoni, Maurizio ; Grazia, Carlo ; Klapez, Martin ; Patriciello, Natale ; Amditis, A. ; Sdongos, E.
Author_Institution
Univ. of Modena & Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italy
Volume
53
Issue
3
fYear
2015
fDate
42064
Firstpage
47
Lastpage
53
Abstract
Wireless communications are critical for public protection and disaster relief (PPDR) professionals during the emergency operations that follow natural or man-made disasters, scenarios in which both commercial and dedicated terrestrial networks often fail to provide the necessary support. The reason is threefold: they simply get destroyed by the disaster, they cannot sustain the sudden surge of network demand or they fail to deliver the necessary bandwidth and/or other QoS guarantees. Because LTE is expected to become the main wireless technology for broadband communication, a lot of studies have been devoted to assess its compliance for PPDR purposes and to find suitable architectural solutions able to meet mission-critical requirements. This approach is surely worthy, but it is based on the assumption that infrastructure-based terrestrial systems are reliable. As a consequence, in worstcase emergency scenarios appropriate guarantees can be provided only in the hypothesis of huge investment costs. Recent developments in satellite technologies are bringing the availability of non-terrestrial high performance channels, with better properties when comparing to LTE for what regards availability and reliability. On this basis, the paper proposes a network architecture based on the integration of satellite and LTE networks for both infrastructure-based and infrastructure-less scenarios. The proposal aims to provide field operators and people in distress with transparent accessibility, coverage guarantees and broadband performance when terrestrial infrastructures are lacking, and to expand their coverage, capacity and resilience otherwise.
Keywords
Long Term Evolution; business continuity; mobile satellite communication; telecommunication network reliability; LTE; PPDR professionals; QoS; broadband communication; commercial networks; disaster recovery; man-made disasters; natural disasters; public protection and disaster relief professionals; satellite integration; satellite technologies; terrestrial networks; wireless communications; Broadband communication; Disasters; Emergency services; Handover; Long Term Evolution; Quality of service; Wireless communication;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0163-6804
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCOM.2015.7060481
Filename
7060481
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