Monday, June 22, 2009
Mesh Network Monitors Volcanoes
Sensors dropped onto Mount St. Helens relayed data after forming an ad-hoc network.
By Kristina Grifantini
Credit: ACM
Today kicks off the three-day MobiSys 2009 conference in Krakow, Poland--a showcase of emerging
mobile and wireless technology. And one
paper that caught my eye comes from Washington State University and the U.S.
Geological Survey. WSU Researchers will present a paper that shows how
an air-dropped mesh sensor network can monitor volcanoes in real time.
Traditionally, scientists have had to use data loggers and permanent installations to
send volcanic data back to observatories. But the
WSU researchers dropped five mobile stations via helicopter, each 2 kilometers apart, on treacherous terrain on Mount St. Helens in Washington State. Despite rain, snow and over 120 mph winds, the stations
formed a mesh network to successfully relay real-time data for a month and a half. Each mobile station is a three-legged
structure, about a meter tall 3 kilograms. Inside is a battery-powered iMote2
platform, a GPS receiver, and sensors. The team used an accelerometer to detect
seismic activity, an infrasonic sensor to capture low-frequency acoustic waves
resulting from eruptions, and a lightning sensor that can detect strikes up to
10 kilometers away. Each node automatically increases the number of samples it takes
once it detects an event. But a user can configure and control the sensors via the Web.
Lead
researcher and assistant professor at WSU Wen-Zhan Song says that the rapidly deployable
system, "has particular value during periods of volcanic unrest but is
also useful for longer term monitoring."
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