underwater wireless communication
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ACTA IMEKO ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
Fabio Leccese ◽  
Giuseppe Schirripa Spagnolo

<p class="Abstract">For military divers, having a robust, secure, and undetectable wireless communication system available is a fundamental element. Wireless intercoms using acoustic waves are currently used. These systems, even if reliable, have the defect of being easily identifiable and detectable. Visible light can pass through sea water. Therefore, light can be used to develop short-range wireless communication systems. To realize secure close-range underwater wireless communication, the Underwater Optical Wireless Communication (UOWC) can be a valid alternative to acoustic wireless communication. UOWC is not a new idea, but the problem of the presence of sunlight and the possibility of using near-ultraviolet radiation (near-UV) has not been adequately addressed in the literature yet. In military applications, the possibility of using invisible optical radiation can be of great interest. In this paper, a feasibility study is carried out to demonstrate that UOWC can be performed using near-ultraviolet radiation. The proposed system can be useful for wireless voice communications between military divers as well as amateur divers.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Taowen Xiao ◽  
Zijian Cai ◽  
Cong Lin ◽  
Qiong Chen

Image sonar is a widely used wireless communication technology for detecting underwater objects, but the detection process often leads to increased difficulty in object identification due to the lack of equipment resolution. In view of the remarkable results achieved by artificial intelligence techniques in the field of underwater wireless communication research, we propose an object detection method based on convolutional neural network (CNN) and shadow information capture to improve the object recognition and localization effect of underwater sonar images by making full use of the shadow information of the object. We design a Shadow Capture Module (SCM) that can capture the shadow information in the feature map and utilize them. SCM is compatible with CNN models that have a small increase in parameters and a certain degree of portability, and it can effectively alleviate the recognition difficulties caused by the lack of device resolution through referencing shadow features. Through extensive experiments on the underwater sonar data set provided by Pengcheng Lab, the proposed method can effectively improve the feature representation of the CNN model and enhance the difference between class and class features. Under the main evaluation standard of PASCAL VOC 2012, the proposed method improved from an average accuracy (mAP) of 69.61% to 75.73% at an IOU threshold of 0.7, which exceeds many existing conventional deep learning models, while the lightweight design of our proposed module is more helpful for the implementation of artificial intelligence technology in the field of underwater wireless communication.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Kamal

There are various different methods and apparatuses in relation to detecting harmful toxins within our ocean and other aquatic environments. The need is for the best approach given the time sensitivity of the matter. Through looking at my past designs, and other buoy deployments, there may be a way to improve detection in regards to signal strength capability. This requires a thorough understanding and overview of software defined networking capabilities centered under underwater wireless communication and telemetry, as well as methods of improvement in regards to real time detection. There also needs to be an emphasis on the real time detection of data and its importance. The likelihood of a noticeable improvement is centered on the idea of a P2P wireless and/or mesh networking implementation to improve signal latency and strength. There shall also be an emphasis on experimental methods as well and protocols of improvement or further implementation. Due to the doppler effect on waves, and the difficulty for traditional signal processing and strength to happen underwater, research within the field of underwater acoustics and wireless communication is crucial.


Author(s):  
Siti Harliza Mohd Razali ◽  
Razali Ngah ◽  
Yoshihide Yamada ◽  
Kamilia Kamardin

<span lang="EN-US">Underwater wireless communication in seawater is becoming more interesting and challenging in recent years. The development of antenna for underwater wireless communication in seawater at 900 MHz UHF range frequency is implemented by using patch antenna. In this paper, the antennas were designed using FEKO, an electromagnetic simulation software, and a suitable size for rectangular patch antenna for seawater application was developed to study the relevance between λ0 with W and L in seawater. The difference between the patches in free space and seawater was the L size, which was slightly bigger, about 0.9 mm, than free space size. But the gain for patch antenna in seawater was found at -2.51 dBi, lower than patch antenna in free space, which was 5.76 dBi due to the path loss in seawater. This shows that attenuation happened, and a better antenna will be design. The one that has better gain, which is around above 2 dBi in seawater, in order to get better performance antenna in seawater environment.</span>


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 468
Author(s):  
Liu Songzuo ◽  
Basit Iqbal ◽  
Imran Ullah Khan ◽  
Niaz Ahmed ◽  
Gang Qiao ◽  
...  

Underwater wireless communication has gained a great deal of attention in the last couple of decades because of its applications in the military, industrial, and monitoring sectors. Despite the extreme physical and MAC layer difficulties, acoustics are used for various applications among the various modes of underwater communication technologies used. While significant research efforts have been made to address these issues, the bottleneck remains in achieving high bandwidth, high throughputs, and data rate. Researchers have begun to look into full duplex (FD) implementation to improve bandwidth efficiency and increase data rate and throughput. Users can send and receive data simultaneously over the FD links, maximizing bandwidth utilization and increasing throughput. As a result, we thoroughly reviewed various FD physical layered UWAC systems and MAC layered protocols for underwater communication. The various problems that the aforementioned systems and protocols have faced, as well as the solutions suggested in previous works to solve each problem, are also highlighted. Various metrics are used to compare the performance of various physical layered FD systems and FD MAC protocols. We also explore some of the open research questions in these FD-physical layered and MAC layered protocols, as well as future research directions. Based on ample information, we suggest a cross-layered architecture based on various IBFD-SI cancellations, DA-CSMA, and FD-MAC protocols. This review provides a broad view of the current FD physical and MAC layered protocols based on acoustic communication, as well as recommendations.


Author(s):  
T.T. Manikandan ◽  
Rajeev Sukumaran ◽  
M.R. Christhu Raj ◽  
M. Saravanan

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