Paper
9 May 2006 A reconfigurable computing platform for plume tracking with mobile sensor networks
Byung Hwa Kim, Colin D'Souza, Richard M. Voyles, Joel Hesch, Stergios I. Roumeliotis
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Much work has been undertaken recently toward the development of low-power, high-performance sensor networks. There are many static remote sensing applications for which this is appropriate. The focus of this development effort is applications that require higher performance computation, but still involve severe constraints on power and other resources. Toward that end, we are developing a reconfigurable computing platform for miniature robotic and human-deployed sensor systems composed of several mobile nodes. The system provides static and dynamic reconfigurability for both software and hardware by the combination of CPU (central processing unit) and FPGA (field-programmable gate array) allowing on-the-fly reprogrammability. Static reconfigurability of the hardware manifests itself in the form of a "morphing bus" architecture that permits the modular connection of various sensors with no bus interface logic. Dynamic hardware reconfigurability provides for the reallocation of hardware resources at run-time as the mobile, resource-constrained nodes encounter unknown environmental conditions that render various sensors ineffective. This computing platform will be described in the context of work on chemical/biological/radiological plume tracking using a distributed team of mobile sensors. The objective for a dispersed team of ground and/or aerial autonomous vehicles (or hand-carried sensors) is to acquire measurements of the concentration of the chemical agent from optimal locations and estimate its source and spread. This requires appropriate distribution, coordination and communication within the team members across a potentially unknown environment. The key problem is to determine the parameters of the distribution of the harmful agent so as to use these values for determining its source and predicting its spread. The accuracy and convergence rate of this estimation process depend not only on the number and accuracy of the sensor measurements but also on their spatial distribution over time (the sampling strategy). For the safety of a human-deployed distribution of sensors, optimized trajectories to minimize human exposure are also of importance. The systems described in this paper are currently being developed. Parts of the system are already in existence and some results from these are described.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Byung Hwa Kim, Colin D'Souza, Richard M. Voyles, Joel Hesch, and Stergios I. Roumeliotis "A reconfigurable computing platform for plume tracking with mobile sensor networks", Proc. SPIE 6230, Unmanned Systems Technology VIII, 62301I (9 May 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.668961
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CITATIONS
Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Field programmable gate arrays

Reconfigurable computing

Robots

Logic

Control systems

Detection and tracking algorithms

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