Radio Communication in Sensor Networks
Radio Communication in Sensor Networks
Radio Communication in Sensor Networks
Radio Communication
Currently, the effective design of a Wireless Sensor Network has risen to the top of
the research priority list. A Wireless Sensor Network is a system that responds to and
recognizes input from physical or environmental factors such as heat, pressure, light,
and so on.
A base station or sink appears to be a point of contact between users and the
network. By inserting some requests and retrieving results from the sink, it can
convert back some essential information from the network. A wireless sensor
network often has thousands of sensor nodes.
Radio signals allow the sensory nodes to communicate with one another. The
wireless sensor nodes are outfitted with sensing and radio transceivers, as well as
computation and power components.[1]
Radio Standards
Antenna Types
Most radiators release more radiation in one direction than the other.
This type of radiator is known as anisotropic.
Mobile wireless sensor networks are far more adaptable than static
sensor networks. Better and enhanced coverage, higher energy economy,
superior channel capacity, and other benefits distinguish MWSN from static
wireless sensor networks.
Image 6: MWSNs[6]
Issues in Wireless Sensor Networks
Design issues, topology issues, and other have all been occurring in wireless
sensor networks WSNs.
Other types of issues that affect the design and performance of the WSNs are
deployment, calibration, synchronization, data dissemination and data aggregation,
localization etc.[3]
Military
Urban
The most common urban WSN applications are related to smart houses,
smart cities, and structural health monitoring.
In homes WSNs can be used to detect gas leakage, measure the temperature
and humidity levels.
Industrial
Health
Environmental