articleSep 26, 2004Closed access

On k-coverage in a mostly sleeping sensor network

The Ohio State University

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Abstract

Sensor networks are often desired to last many times longer than the active lifetime of individual sensors. This is usually achieved by putting sensors to sleep for most of their lifetime. On the other hand, surveillance kind of applications require guaranteed k-coverage of the protected region at all times. As a result, determining the appropriate number of sensors to deploy that achieves both goals simultaneously becomes a challenging problem. In this paper, we consider three kinds of deployments for a sensor network on a unit square - a √n x √n grid, random uniform (for all n points), and Poisson (with density n). In all three deployments, each sensor is active with probability p, independently from the…

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643
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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Software deployment
  • Wireless sensor network
  • Computer science
  • Grid
  • Upper and lower bounds
  • Poisson distribution
  • Event (particle physics)
  • Boundary (topology)
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