Sensor City: This image shows hypothetical locations for wireless sensor nodes in the city of Cambridge, MA. Ultimately, 100 sensor nodes mounted on telephone poles could collect data on pollutants, weather, and traffic. Researchers have already installed such nodes on Harvard's campus and near BBN Technologies’ corporate offices, but they plan to add about 90 more throughout Cambridge. One of the first projects to use the network will monitor airborne pollution near industrial sites.

Sensor Node: This sensor node, on a rooftop at BBN Technologies, is composed of sensors (left) and computer hardware--which includes a PC that runs the Linux operating system and two Wi-Fi radios--housed in a weatherproof case (white box on right).


Josh Bers, BBN.

Communications

A Wireless Sensor City

A wireless-sensor network to report pollution and traffic comes to Cambridge, MA.

  • Friday, April 13, 2007
  • By Kate Greene

Engineers at Harvard and BBN Technologies are working on a project that will cover the city of Cambridge, MA, with wireless-sensor nodes mounted to telephone poles that could allow researchers to see the specific locations and times of day when pollution peaks. The researchers could also track the city's weather with more precision and help test new wireless technology for better Wi-Fi. The network, called CitySense, will be an open test bed on which anyone can run experiments, says Matt Welsh, a professor of computer science at Harvard.

The plan is to install 100 general-purpose nodes onto the streetlights of Cambridge, drawing power from the city's infrastructure. Already there are five installed on Harvard's campus and five at BBN's facilities. Each node will be relatively large--about the size of a Mac Mini computer. A node will include a PC that runs the Linux operating system and a couple of gigabytes of flash memory as a hard drive. And instead of using a common low-power wireless-sensor protocol called Zigbee, CitySense nodes will use standard Wi-Fi radios; two radios will be in each node, one for management and control of the network, and the other for experiments. And, Welsh says, virtually any type of sensor will be able to connect to the nodes.

A first batch of sensors will collect weather data such as rainfall, wind speed, and barometric pressure. Another set of sensors will measure pollution such as the amount of particles in the air. Researchers could use the weather data to understand how temperature or wind speed vary throughout the city, and doctors could use the pollution data to advise patients with asthma to stay away from certain areas at certain times of day. Eventually, more sensors could be incorporated: for example, motion sensors could measure traffic flow, and light sensors scattered throughout the city could monitor parking spaces; the data would be uploaded to the CitySense network. "With something like CitySense," Welsh says, "we're going to be able to blanket the city with sensors and get a much more complete sense of what's going on."

Welsh expects that CitySense will, in addition to collecting and transmitting sensor data, be employed by computer scientists to test new network software and protocols, which could be used to help make Wi-Fi connections more robust. Currently, the only way to test new wireless protocols, says Welsh, is to run them on a computer simulation. But CitySense could be thought of as "an open laboratory," he says, where researchers can upload and run their programs, collect data, and write papers.

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The payoff of having an openly available wireless network like CitySense could be great, says Thomas Little, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Boston University. "The existence of a wireless backbone like CitySense becomes an enormous asset," he says. "There are very interesting opportunities to exploit," he adds, including business opportunities. He envisions being able to integrate all sorts of sensors into the CitySense backbone, such as those that track the position of public transportation--which could help people know when the next bus is coming--and even video cameras that could monitor anything from traffic to urban wildlife.

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scottminor

1 Comment

  • 1769 Days Ago
  • 04/13/2007

Dirt Goes Wireless

CyberUtility, LLC (www.cyberutility.net) has an international patent on a wireless device that will be attached to every property boundary corner on the face of the earth - an ultra dense low power mesh network grid - sensors everywhere - ubiquitous computing, real-time data, personal sensor space, location-aware-search, mobile interactive marketing, mobile augmented reality.  Currently, this is the largest proposed international Zigbee mesh network deployment project with 20,000,000 survey pins placed each year in the US alone.  Units are the size of a D cell battery with an antenna on top -- but the fully sealed and enclosed device is designed to be buried.

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abcarterjr

45 Comments

  • 1768 Days Ago
  • 04/14/2007

Spotting Fire

Mounted on flag polls and used to spot
Smoke and/or flames in a rural forest
setting during Red Flag(no burn) days.

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mkogrady

425 Comments

  • 1766 Days Ago
  • 04/16/2007

Intruder Monitoring

Perhaps a grid-like series of these can be planted along our borders to detect when people are crossing illegally. A sensor system like this can use GPS to pinpoint the crossing location to aid in dispatching border guards and perhaps catalog and count the numbers more accurately too. Power the whole system with protected Solar Panels so it runs 7X24 and we can offset some costs by minimizing headcount for border security.

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sidra

1 Comment

  • 981 Days Ago
  • 06/09/2009

Re: Intruder Monitoring

please sent me further details about the project

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