249 research outputs found
Simulating Vehicle Movement and Multi-Hop Connectivity from Basic Safety Messages
The Basic Safety Message (BSM) is a standardized communication packet that is
sent every tenth of a second between connected vehicles using Dedicated Short
Range Communication (DSRC). BSMs contain data about the sending vehicle's
state, such as speed, location, and the status of the turn signal. Currently,
many BSM datasets are available through the connected vehicle testbeds of U.S.
Department of Transportation from all over the country. However, without a
proper visualization tool, it is not possible to analyze or visually get an
overview of the spatio-temporal distribution of the data. With this goal, a web
application has been developed which can ingest a raw BSM dataset and display a
time-based simulation of vehicle movement. The simulation also displays
multi-hop vehicular network connectivity over DSRC. This paper gives details
about the application, including an explanation of the multi-hop partitioning
algorithm used to classify the vehicles into separate network partitions. A
performance analysis for the simulation is included, in which it is suggested
that calculating a connectivity matrix with the multi-hop partitioning
algorithm is computationally expensive for large number of vehicles
Solid-liquid distribution coefficients (Kd-s) of geological deposits at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant site with respect to Sr, Cs and Pu radionuclides: a short review
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