21-09-2012, 04:55 PM
Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
manet.pptx (Size: 305.69 KB / Downloads: 226)
Wireless Networks
Need: Access computing and communication services, on the move
Infrastructure-based Networks
traditional cellular systems (base station infrastructure)
Wireless LANs
Infrared (IrDA) or radio links (Wavelan)
very flexible within the reception area; ad-hoc networks possible
low bandwidth compared to wired networks (1-10 Mbit/s)
Ad hoc Networks
useful when infrastructure not available, impractical, or expensive
military applications, rescue, home networking
Cellular Wireless
Single hop wireless connectivity to the wired world
Space divided into cells
A base station is responsible to communicate with hosts in its cell
Mobile hosts can change cells while communicating
Hand-off occurs when a mobile host starts communicating via a new base station
Why Ad Hoc Networks
Setting up of fixed access points and backbone infrastructure is not always viable
Infrastructure may not be present in a disaster area or war zone
Infrastructure may not be practical for short-range radios; Bluetooth (range ~ 10m)
Ad hoc networks:
Do not need backbone infrastructure support
Are easy to deploy
Useful when infrastructure is absent, destroyed or impractical
Many Applications
Personal area networking
cell phone, laptop, ear phone, wrist watch
Military environments
soldiers, tanks, planes
Civilian environments
taxi cab network
meeting rooms
sports stadiums
boats, small aircraft
Emergency operations
search-and-rescue
policing and fire fighting
Challenges in Mobile Environments
Limitations of the Wireless Network
packet loss due to transmission errors
variable capacity links
frequent disconnections/partitions
limited communication bandwidth
Broadcast nature of the communications
Limitations Imposed by Mobility
dynamically changing topologies/routes
lack of mobility awareness by system/applications
Limitations of the Mobile Computer
short battery lifetime
limited capacities
manet.pptx (Size: 305.69 KB / Downloads: 226)
Wireless Networks
Need: Access computing and communication services, on the move
Infrastructure-based Networks
traditional cellular systems (base station infrastructure)
Wireless LANs
Infrared (IrDA) or radio links (Wavelan)
very flexible within the reception area; ad-hoc networks possible
low bandwidth compared to wired networks (1-10 Mbit/s)
Ad hoc Networks
useful when infrastructure not available, impractical, or expensive
military applications, rescue, home networking
Cellular Wireless
Single hop wireless connectivity to the wired world
Space divided into cells
A base station is responsible to communicate with hosts in its cell
Mobile hosts can change cells while communicating
Hand-off occurs when a mobile host starts communicating via a new base station
Why Ad Hoc Networks
Setting up of fixed access points and backbone infrastructure is not always viable
Infrastructure may not be present in a disaster area or war zone
Infrastructure may not be practical for short-range radios; Bluetooth (range ~ 10m)
Ad hoc networks:
Do not need backbone infrastructure support
Are easy to deploy
Useful when infrastructure is absent, destroyed or impractical
Many Applications
Personal area networking
cell phone, laptop, ear phone, wrist watch
Military environments
soldiers, tanks, planes
Civilian environments
taxi cab network
meeting rooms
sports stadiums
boats, small aircraft
Emergency operations
search-and-rescue
policing and fire fighting
Challenges in Mobile Environments
Limitations of the Wireless Network
packet loss due to transmission errors
variable capacity links
frequent disconnections/partitions
limited communication bandwidth
Broadcast nature of the communications
Limitations Imposed by Mobility
dynamically changing topologies/routes
lack of mobility awareness by system/applications
Limitations of the Mobile Computer
short battery lifetime
limited capacities