678 research outputs found
Two-Echelon Vehicle and UAV Routing for Post-Disaster Humanitarian Operations with Uncertain Demand
Humanitarian logistics service providers have two major responsibilities
immediately after a disaster: locating trapped people and routing aid to them.
These difficult operations are further hindered by failures in the
transportation and telecommunications networks, which are often rendered
unusable by the disaster at hand. In this work, we propose two-echelon vehicle
routing frameworks for performing these operations using aerial uncrewed
autonomous vehicles (UAVs or drones) to address the issues associated with
these failures. In our proposed frameworks, we assume that ground vehicles
cannot reach the trapped population directly, but they can only transport
drones from a depot to some intermediate locations. The drones launched from
these locations serve to both identify demands for medical and other aids
(e.g., epi-pens, medical supplies, dry food, water) and make deliveries to
satisfy them. Specifically, we present two decision frameworks, in which the
resulting optimization problem is formulated as a two-echelon vehicle routing
problem. The first framework addresses the problem in two stages: providing
telecommunications capabilities in the first stage and satisfying the resulting
demands in the second. To that end, two types of drones are considered. Hotspot
drones have the capability of providing cell phone and internet reception, and
hence are used to capture demands. Delivery drones are subsequently employed to
satisfy the observed demand. The second framework, on the other hand, addresses
the problem as a stochastic emergency aid delivery problem, which uses a
two-stage robust optimization model to handle demand uncertainty. To solve the
resulting models, we propose efficient and novel solution approaches
Optimal Mission Planning of Autonomous Mobile Agents for Applications in Microgrids, Sensor Networks, and Military Reconnaissance
As technology advances, the use of collaborative autonomous mobile systems for various applications will become evermore prevalent. One interesting application of these multi-agent systems is for autonomous mobile microgrids. These systems will play an increasingly important role in applications such as military special operations for mobile ad-hoc power infrastructures and for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions. In performing these operations with these autonomous energy assets, there is a crucial need to optimize their functionality according to their specific application and mission. Challenges arise in determining mission characteristics such as how each resource should operate, when, where, and for how long.
This thesis explores solutions in determining optimal mission plans around the applications of autonomous mobile microgrids and resource scheduling with UGVs and UAVs. Optimal network connections, energy asset locations, and cabling trajectories are determined in the mobile microgrid application. The resource scheduling applications investigate the use of a UGV to recharge wireless sensors in a wireless sensor network. Optimal recharging of mobile distributed UAVs performing reconnaissance missions is also explored. With genetic algorithm solution approaches, the results show the proposed methods can provide reasonable a-priori mission plans, considering the applied constraints and objective functions in each application. The contributions of this thesis are: (1) The development and analysis of solution methodologies and mission simulators for a-priori mission plan development and testing, for applications in organizing and scheduling power delivery with mobile energy assets. Applying these methods results in (2) the development and analysis of reasonable a-priori mission plans for autonomous mobile microgrids/assets, in various scenarios. This work could be extended to include a more diverse set of heterogeneous agents and incorporate dynamic loads to provide power to
Establishing and optimising unmanned airborne relay networks in urban environments
This thesis assesses the use of a group of small, low-altitude, low-power (in terms of communication equipment), xed-wing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) as a mobile communication relay nodes to facilitate reliable communication between ground nodes in urban environments. This work focuses on enhancing existing models for optimal trajectory planning and enabling UAV relay implementation in realistic urban scenarios. The performance of the proposed UAV relay algorithms was demonstrated and proved through an indoor simulated urban environment, the rst experiment of its kind.The objective of enabling UAV relay deployment in realistic urban environments is addressed through relaxing the constraints on the assumptions of communication prediction models assumptions, reducing knowledge requirements and improving prediction efficiency. This thesis explores assumptions for urban environment knowledge at three different levels: (i) full knowledge about the urban environment, (ii) partially known urban environments, and (iii) no knowledge about the urban environment. The work starts with exploring models that assume the city size, layout and its effects on wireless communication strength are known, representing full knowledge about the urban environment. [Continues.]</div
Self-Evolving Integrated Vertical Heterogeneous Networks
6G and beyond networks tend towards fully intelligent and adaptive design in
order to provide better operational agility in maintaining universal wireless
access and supporting a wide range of services and use cases while dealing with
network complexity efficiently. Such enhanced network agility will require
developing a self-evolving capability in designing both the network
architecture and resource management to intelligently utilize resources, reduce
operational costs, and achieve the coveted quality of service (QoS). To enable
this capability, the necessity of considering an integrated vertical
heterogeneous network (VHetNet) architecture appears to be inevitable due to
its high inherent agility. Moreover, employing an intelligent framework is
another crucial requirement for self-evolving networks to deal with real-time
network optimization problems. Hence, in this work, to provide a better insight
on network architecture design in support of self-evolving networks, we
highlight the merits of integrated VHetNet architecture while proposing an
intelligent framework for self-evolving integrated vertical heterogeneous
networks (SEI-VHetNets). The impact of the challenges associated with
SEI-VHetNet architecture, on network management is also studied considering a
generalized network model. Furthermore, the current literature on network
management of integrated VHetNets along with the recent advancements in
artificial intelligence (AI)/machine learning (ML) solutions are discussed.
Accordingly, the core challenges of integrating AI/ML in SEI-VHetNets are
identified. Finally, the potential future research directions for advancing the
autonomous and self-evolving capabilities of SEI-VHetNets are discussed.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Optimization and Communication in UAV Networks
UAVs are becoming a reality and attract increasing attention. They can be remotely controlled or completely autonomous and be used alone or as a fleet and in a large set of applications. They are constrained by hardware since they cannot be too heavy and rely on batteries. Their use still raises a large set of exciting new challenges in terms of trajectory optimization and positioning when they are used alone or in cooperation, and communication when they evolve in swarm, to name but a few examples. This book presents some new original contributions regarding UAV or UAV swarm optimization and communication aspects
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