Ad hoc positioning system (APS)

D Niculescu, B Nath - GLOBECOM'01. IEEE global …, 2001 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
GLOBECOM'01. IEEE global telecommunications conference (Cat. No …, 2001ieeexplore.ieee.org
Many ad hoc network protocols and applications assume the knowledge of geographic
location of nodes. The absolute location of each networked node is an assumed fact by most
sensor networks which can then present the sensed information on a geographical map.
Finding location without the aid of GPS in each node of an ad hoc network is important in
cases where GPS is either not accessible, or not practical to use due to power, form factor or
line of sight conditions. Location would also enable routing in sufficiently isotropic large …
Many ad hoc network protocols and applications assume the knowledge of geographic location of nodes. The absolute location of each networked node is an assumed fact by most sensor networks which can then present the sensed information on a geographical map. Finding location without the aid of GPS in each node of an ad hoc network is important in cases where GPS is either not accessible, or not practical to use due to power, form factor or line of sight conditions. Location would also enable routing in sufficiently isotropic large networks, without the use of large routing tables. We are proposing APS - a distributed, hop by hop positioning algorithm, that works as an extension of both distance vector routing and GPS positioning in order to provide approximate location for all nodes in a network where only a limited fraction of nodes have self location capability.
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