Distributed Sensor Actuator Network for Antarctic Plants Studies

Author(s):  
Krzysztof Herman ◽  
Alvaro Palma ◽  
Alonso Saez ◽  
Patricia Saez ◽  
Washington Fernandez ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bimo Ananto Pamungkas ◽  
Adian Fatchur Rochim ◽  
Eko Didik Widianto

This paper contains distributed sensor system design for temperature, air humidity, and light intensity monitoring in greenhouse based Arduino Uno board. System contains 2 sensor-actuator nodes, and 1 controller node connected to Ethernet network through Ethernet Shield board. Sensor-actuator node with DHT 11 sensor works for taking environment informations such as temperature, air humidity, and light intensity, runs actuation in the form of emulating LED lights; and communicates with controller node which will process data using serial wire as a communication tool between nodes. Monitoring datas and user control interface is provided by controller node which can be accessed online in web browser. The system ability for monitoring environment in greenhouse and online access of environmental data generates controllable and automatic monitoring and management of plants.


Author(s):  
Shivakumar Sastry ◽  
S. Sitharama Iyengar

2005 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shivakumar Sastry ◽  
S. S. Iyengar

Emerging technologies offer new paradigms for computation, control, collaboration, and communication. To realize the full potential of these technologies in industry, defense, and homeland security applications, it is necessary to exploit the real-time distributed computing capabilities of sensor-actuator networks. To reliably design and develop such networks, it is necessary to develop deeper insight into the underlying model for real-time computation and the infrastructure at the node level that supports this model. In this paper, we discuss a new node-level operating system and mechanisms necessary to deploy reliable applications. The overriding issue that guides the design of this operating system is quality of service metric called predictability. A sensor-actuator network is a distributed platform for integrated computation and control in real-time environments. The nodes in such a network are distinguished by being resource constrained. The power of the network arises from the interactions between simple nodes. Such a network extends the popular distributed sensor networks in several dimensions. After identifying a real-time model, we develop a notion of predictability for a sensor-actuator network. We discuss how the node-level operating system is designed in the resource-constrained environment. An efficient multithreading mechanism and scheduling strategy are required to ensure that local tasks are executed within jitter bounds and that end-to-end delays do not violate application constraints. Mechanisms to support communication, monitoring, safety, fault tolerance, programming, diagnosability, reconfiguration, composability, interoperability, and security are discussed.


1994 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 357-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byeongsik Ko ◽  
Benson H. Tongue ◽  
Andrew Packard

The optimal location problem of distributed sensor/actuator for observation and control of a flexible structure is investigated. Using a property of controllability and observability grammian matrices, this approach employs a nonlinear optimization technique to determine the optimal placement of a distributed sensor/actuator. The effect of unimportant modes that do not strongly affect the structural behavior of a system is minimized and the effect of important modes is maximized. The final objective function is expressed as the combinational form of two different objective functions. This technique is applied to several types of beam support conditions and the corresponding optimal locations are determined.


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