Wireless sensor network
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Typical Multihop Wireless Sensor Network Architecture
A wireless sensor network (WSN) is a wireless network
consisting of spatially distributed autonomous devices using sensors to
cooperatively monitor physical or environmental conditions, such as
temperature, sound, vibration, pressure, motion or pollutants, at different
locations.[1][2] The development of wireless sensor networks was originally
motivated by military applications such as battlefield surveillance. However,
wireless sensor networks are now used in many civilian application areas,
including environment and habitat monitoring, healthcare applications, home
automation, and traffic control.[1][3]
In addition to one or more sensors, each node in a sensor
network is typically equipped with a radio transceiver or other wireless
communications device, a small microcontroller, and an energy source, usually a
battery. The envisaged size of a single sensor node can vary from shoebox-sized
nodes down to devices the size of grain of dust,[1] although functioning
'motes' of genuine microscopic dimensions have yet to be created. The cost of
sensor nodes is similarly variable, ranging from hundreds of dollars to a few
cents, depending on the size of the sensor network and the complexity required
of individual sensor nodes.[1] Size and cost constraints on sensor nodes result
in corresponding constraints on resources such as energy, memory, computational
speed and bandwidth.[1]
A sensor network normally constitutes a wireless ad-hoc
network, meaning that each sensor supports a multi-hop routing algorithm
(several nodes may forward data packets to the base station).
In computer science and telecommunications, wireless sensor
networks are an active research area with numerous workshops and conferences
arranged each year.Contents [hide]
1 Applications
1.1 Area monitoring
2 Characteristics
3 Platforms
3.1 Standards
3.2 Hardware
3.3 Software
3.3.1 Operating systems
3.3.2 Middleware
3.3.3 Programming languages
3.3.4 Algorithms
4 Simulators
5 Data visualization
6 Conferences
7 See also
8 References
9 Further reading
9.1 Journals
10 External links
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