Mobile Crowd Sensing in Space Weather Monitoring: The Mahali Project

被引:41
作者
Pankratius, Victor [1 ]
Lind, Frank [1 ]
Coster, Anthea [1 ]
Erickson, Philip [2 ]
Semeter, Joshua [3 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Haystack Observ, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] MIT, Haystack Observ, Atmospher Sci Grp, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[3] Boston Univ, Boston, MA 02215 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
NETWORK;
D O I
10.1109/MCOM.2014.6871665
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
Space weather refers to the conditions and evolution of Earth's near space environment including electron density variations in the ionosphere. This environment is influenced by both the Sun and terrestrial processes, and has an impact on communications, navigation, and terrestrial power systems. The recent discovery of clear signatures in the ionosphere related to tsunamis and earthquakes suggests that the ionosphere itself may serve as a valuable and versatile sensor, registering many types of Earth- and space-based phenomena. To realize this potential, ionospheric electron density must be monitored through a dense wide-area sensor mesh that is expensive to realize with traditional deployments and observation techniques. Crowd-sourcing can help pursue this novel direction by providing new capabilities, including an increase in the number of sensors as well as expanding data transport capabilities through participating devices that act as relays. This article describes the Mahali project, which is currently at the beginning of exploring these promising techniques. Mahali uses GPS signals that penetrate the ionosphere for science rather than positioning. A large number of ground-based sensors will be able to feed data through mobile devices into a cloud-based processing environment, enabling a tomographic analysis of the global ionosphere at unprecedented resolution and coverage. This novel approach brings the exploitation of the ionosphere as a global earth system sensor technologically and economically within reach.
引用
收藏
页码:22 / 28
页数:7
相关论文
共 15 条
[1]  
Baker Daniel N., 2009, Severe Space Weather Events-Understanding Societal and Economic Impacts A Workshop Report
[2]  
Coster A., 2003, GPS World, V3, P42
[3]   STORM TIME PLASMA TRANSPORT AT MIDDLE AND HIGH-LATITUDES [J].
FOSTER, JC .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS, 1993, 98 (A2) :1675-1689
[4]   Ionospheric signatures of Tohoku-Oki tsunami of March 11, 2011: Model comparisons near the epicenter [J].
Galvan, David A. ;
Komjathy, Attila ;
Hickey, Michael P. ;
Stephens, Philip ;
Snively, Jonathan ;
Song, Y. Tony ;
Butala, Mark D. ;
Mannucci, Anthony J. .
RADIO SCIENCE, 2012, 47
[5]   Detecting ionospheric TEC perturbations caused by natural hazards using a global network of GPS receivers: The Tohoku case study [J].
Komjathy, A. ;
Galvan, D. A. ;
Stephens, P. ;
Butala, M. D. ;
Akopian, V. ;
Wilson, B. ;
Verkhoglyadova, O. ;
Mannucci, A. J. ;
Hickey, M. .
EARTH PLANETS AND SPACE, 2012, 64 (12) :1287-1294
[6]  
Man-Ching Yuen, 2011, Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE Third International Conference on Privacy, Security, Risk and Trust and IEEE Third International Conference on Social Computing (PASSAT/SocialCom 2011), P766, DOI 10.1109/PASSAT/SocialCom.2011.203
[7]   A global mapping technique for GPS-derived ionospheric total electron content measurements [J].
Mannucci, AJ ;
Wilson, BD ;
Yuan, DN ;
Ho, CH ;
Lindqwister, UJ ;
Runge, TF .
RADIO SCIENCE, 1998, 33 (03) :565-582
[8]   Conceptual Foundations of Crowdsourcing: A Review of IS Research [J].
Pedersen, Jay ;
Kocsis, David ;
Tripathi, Abhishek ;
Tarrell, Alvin ;
Weerakoon, Aruna ;
Tahmasbi, Nargess ;
Xiong, Jie ;
Deng, Wei ;
Oh, Onook ;
deVreede, Gert-Jan .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 46TH ANNUAL HAWAII INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2013, :579-588
[9]   IONOSPHERIC TOMOGRAPHY - ITS LIMITATIONS AND RECONSTRUCTION METHODS [J].
RAYMUND, TD ;
FRANKE, SJ ;
YEH, KC .
JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC AND TERRESTRIAL PHYSICS, 1994, 56 (05) :637-&
[10]   Automated GPS processing for global total electron content data [J].
Rideout, William ;
Coster, Anthea .
GPS SOLUTIONS, 2006, 10 (03) :219-228