Design and Analysis of Cost-Efficient Sensor Deployment for Tracking Small UAS with Agent-Based Modeling
Authored by Sangmi Shin, Seongha Park, Yongho Kim, Eric T Matson
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3390/s16040575
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Recently, commercial unmanned aerial systems (UAS) have gained
popularity. However, these UAS are potential threats to people in terms
of safety in public places, such as public parks or stadiums. To reduce
such threats, we consider a design, modeling, and evaluation of a
cost-efficient sensor system that detects and tracks small UAS. In this
research, we focus on discovering the best sensor deployments by
simulating different types and numbers of sensors in a designated area, which provide reasonable detection rates at low costs. Also, the system
should cover the crowded areas more thoroughly than vacant areas to
reduce direct threats to people underneath. This research study utilized
the Agent-Based Modeling (ABM) technique to model a system consisting of
independent and heterogeneous agents that interact with each other. Our
previous work presented the ability to apply ABM to analyze the sensor
configurations with two types of radars in terms of cost-efficiency. The
results from the ABM simulation provide a list of candidate
configurations and deployments that can be referred to for applications
in the real world environment.
Tags
Simulation
networks
Coverage
Placement