Paper published in a book (Scientific congresses, symposiums and conference proceedings)
VBCA: A Virtual Forces Clustering Algorithm for Autonomous Aerial Drone Systems
Brust, Matthias R.; Akbas, M. Ilhan; Turgut, Damla
2016In 2016 Annual IEEE Systems Conference (SysCon)
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
1607.05048.pdf
Author postprint (704.51 kB)
Download

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
clustering; UAV; drones
Abstract :
[en] We consider the positioning problem of aerial drone systems for efficient three-dimensional (3-D) coverage. Our solution draws from molecular geometry, where forces among electron pairs surrounding a central atom arrange their positions. In this paper, we propose a 3-D clustering algorithm for autonomous positioning (VBCA) of aerial drone networks based on virtual forces. These virtual forces induce interactions among drones and structure the system topology. The advantages of our approach are that (1) virtual forces enable drones to self-organize the positioning process and (2) VBCA can be implemented entirely localized. Extensive simulations show that our virtual forces clustering approach produces scalable 3-D topologies exhibiting near-optimal volume coverage. VBCA triggers efficient topology rearrangement for an altering number of nodes, while providing network connectivity to the central drone. We also draw a comparison of volume coverage achieved by VBCA against existing approaches and find VBCA up to 40% more efficient.
Disciplines :
Computer science
Author, co-author :
Brust, Matthias R. ;  University of Luxembourg > Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SNT)
Akbas, M. Ilhan;  University of Central Florida - UCF
Turgut, Damla;  University of Central Florida - UCF
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
VBCA: A Virtual Forces Clustering Algorithm for Autonomous Aerial Drone Systems
Publication date :
2016
Event name :
IEEE Systems Conference (SysCon)
Event date :
2016
Main work title :
2016 Annual IEEE Systems Conference (SysCon)
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Available on ORBilu :
since 13 March 2019

Statistics


Number of views
54 (1 by Unilu)
Number of downloads
95 (1 by Unilu)

Scopus citations®
 
20
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
11
WoS citations
 
10

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBilu