Peer Observations of Observation Units
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/13269Date
2018-06-01Type
Master thesisMastergradsoppgave
Author
Stormoen, CamillaAbstract
The Arctic Tundra in the far northern hemisphere is one of ecosystems that are
most affected by the climate changes in the world today. Five Fram Center
institutions developed a long-term research project called Climate-ecological
Observatory for Arctic Tundra (COAT). Their goal is to create robust observation
systems which enable documentation and understanding of climate change
impacts on the Arctic tundra ecosystems.
This thesis describes a prototype of a Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) system
where nodes in the network creates clusters of Observation Units (OUs) to
accumulate data. The purpose is to fetch and accumulate data observed by
OUs for further use and to provide for a more flexible and powerful sensor in
the coat monitoring of the Arctic Tundra.
We describe a system where nodes discover each other through a range limited
broadcast. Together they form clusters. Each cluster elect a Cluster Head (CH)
which is responsible for sending out a request for gather and accumulate data
from the other nodes in the cluster. The role as CH is rotating among the nodes
to conserve battery.
Results show that the system have a steady memory usage between 60% and
76% and CPU usage around 75% during execution. Experiments also show that
the CH received fewer packets of data compared to sent packets from OUs in
the cluster which indicates that the OUs in the system accumulates data when
intended.
The proposed prototype of the system proved capable of electing CHs that
gathers and accumulates data efficiently. As a prototype, it still has room for
improvements such as the availability of nodes in the system, CH-elections
and multiple CHs in each cluster. A future system could further investigate
the benefits of having multiple CHs and how to gather and accumulate data
more efficiently. There is still a need for conducting further work for a real-life
environment in the Arctic Tundra.
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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