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auSense: Collaborative Airspace Sensing by Commercial Airplanes and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

auSense: Collaborative Airspace Sensing by Commercial Airplanes and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles


Abstract:

In recent years, a large number of commercial airplanes equipped with sensors have been contributing to collecting the atmospheric composition and meteorological data. Ba...Show More

Abstract:

In recent years, a large number of commercial airplanes equipped with sensors have been contributing to collecting the atmospheric composition and meteorological data. Based on a worldwide commercial airplane dataset, we identify an inherent limitation of such an airplane-based sensing system as airplanes fly through airspace with spatiotemporal dynamic. As a result, the sensed data is coarse-grained and incomplete. Moreover, naive methods such as installing sensors on more airplanes, cannot effectively address the issue. In this paper, we propose a collaborative airspace sensing strategy auSense to improve the sensing performance. In auSense, UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) are employed to sense the airspace when the airspace is not sensed by airplanes. Particularly, auSense leverages the existing worldwide commercial airplane tracking infrastructure and fine-grained trajectory data to estimate whether and when one airspace will be sensed by airplanes. Then auSense schedules the UAV paths to improve the sensing performance. We implement auSense in different airspaces based on a 1-month airplane trajectory data. The experiments demonstrate the superior performance of our data-driven UAV and commercial airplane collaborative strategy over the ground truth and other benchmarks.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology ( Volume: 69, Issue: 6, June 2020)
Page(s): 5995 - 6010
Date of Publication: 13 April 2020

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I. Introduction

Currently, thousands of commercial airplanes employ their navigation systems and onboard sensors to collect airspace data, such as the atmospheric composition data and meteorology data. For example, United Parcel Service (UPS) airline deploys meteorology sensors on its hundreds of airplanes for global meteorology data collection [1]. Another airplane-based sensing system is IAGOS (In-service Aircraft for a Global Observing System) [2], an European Research Infrastructure that has been providing global atmospheric composition observation for more 25 years. Such airplane-based atmospheric composition data (e.g., ozone, carbon monoxide, nitric oxides, etc.) and meteorology data (e.g., temperature, humidity, pressure, cloud, etc.) has a wide application in monitoring and preventing atmospheric pollution [3], and substantial weather forecasting [4], respectively. The airplane-based sensing system outperforms the traditional ground sensing stations and sounding balloons in in terms of wider coverage, lower cost, and more flexibility, etc.

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