Title :
Towards a mission planning toolbox for the Airborne Network: Optimizing ground coverage under connectivity constraints
Author :
Tiwari, Abhishek ; Ganguli, Anurag ; Sampath, Ashwin
Author_Institution :
UtopiaCompression Corp., Los Angeles, CA
Abstract :
The airborne network (AN) is a constellation of networked aircrafts flying in periodic orbits. AN is an enabling technology for network centric warfare for the military, autonomous air traffic control for commercial aviation and for providing Internet access over a broad urban area. AN is a highly dynamic environment and presents challenges that have not been addressed in traditional wire-line or wireless MANET research. Wireless links in AN are quasi-persistent and break due to platform banking and antenna shadowing. In this paper, the objective is to deploy airborne nodes so that they provide ground nodes with high data upload capacity while making sure that a minimal topology within the backbone airborne network is always maintained. For the sake of simplicity of presentation we make a few assumptions on the trajectories of the airborne nodes. We verify our assumptions against a well studied airborne network deployment scenario. Using tools from convex optimization we determine optimal locations of airborne nodes for three different scenarios. We present our results graphically and illustrate them using examples.
Keywords :
Internet; air traffic control; aircraft communication; mobile computing; optimisation; telecommunication network topology; Internet access; airborne network; autonomous air traffic control; commercial aviation; connectivity constraints; convex optimization; ground coverage; military network centric warfare; minimal topology; mission planning toolbox; network deployment; networked aircrafts; platform banking; wireless MANET; wireless links; Air traffic control; Banking; Constraint optimization; IP networks; Military aircraft; Mobile ad hoc networks; Network topology; Orbits; Shadow mapping; Urban areas;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2008 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1487-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-323X
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2008.4526375