Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems

Verification of the correct functionality of multi-vehicle systems in high-fidelity scenarios is required before any deployment of such a complex system, e.g., in missions of remote sensing or in mobile sensor networks. Mixed-reality simulations where both virtual and physical entities can coexist a...

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Main Authors: Martin Selecký, Jan Faigl, Milan Rollo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/18/3/853
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spelling doaj-709281600ede4410ac00a4d8f05291932020-11-24T20:40:43ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202018-03-0118385310.3390/s18030853s18030853Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned SystemsMartin Selecký0Jan Faigl1Milan Rollo2Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, Technická 2, 166 27 Prague, Czech RepublicFaculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, Technická 2, 166 27 Prague, Czech RepublicFaculty of Electrical Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, Technická 2, 166 27 Prague, Czech RepublicVerification of the correct functionality of multi-vehicle systems in high-fidelity scenarios is required before any deployment of such a complex system, e.g., in missions of remote sensing or in mobile sensor networks. Mixed-reality simulations where both virtual and physical entities can coexist and interact have been shown to be beneficial for development, testing, and verification of such systems. This paper deals with the problems of designing a certain communication subsystem for such highly desirable realistic simulations. Requirements of this communication subsystem, including proper addressing, transparent routing, visibility modeling, or message management, are specified prior to designing an appropriate solution. Then, a suitable architecture of this communication subsystem is proposed together with solutions to the challenges that arise when simultaneous virtual and physical message transmissions occur. The proposed architecture can be utilized as a high-fidelity network simulator for vehicular systems with implicit mobility models that are given by real trajectories of the vehicles. The architecture has been utilized within multiple projects dealing with the development and practical deployment of multi-UAV systems, which support the architecture’s viability and advantages. The provided experimental results show the achieved similarity of the communication characteristics of the fully deployed hardware setup to the setup utilizing the proposed mixed-reality architecture.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/18/3/853communication architecturemixed-reality simulationsunmanned systemsmiddlewaretestbeds
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Selecký
Jan Faigl
Milan Rollo
spellingShingle Martin Selecký
Jan Faigl
Milan Rollo
Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems
Sensors
communication architecture
mixed-reality simulations
unmanned systems
middleware
testbeds
author_facet Martin Selecký
Jan Faigl
Milan Rollo
author_sort Martin Selecký
title Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems
title_short Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems
title_full Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems
title_fullStr Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems
title_full_unstemmed Communication Architecture in Mixed-Reality Simulations of Unmanned Systems
title_sort communication architecture in mixed-reality simulations of unmanned systems
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Verification of the correct functionality of multi-vehicle systems in high-fidelity scenarios is required before any deployment of such a complex system, e.g., in missions of remote sensing or in mobile sensor networks. Mixed-reality simulations where both virtual and physical entities can coexist and interact have been shown to be beneficial for development, testing, and verification of such systems. This paper deals with the problems of designing a certain communication subsystem for such highly desirable realistic simulations. Requirements of this communication subsystem, including proper addressing, transparent routing, visibility modeling, or message management, are specified prior to designing an appropriate solution. Then, a suitable architecture of this communication subsystem is proposed together with solutions to the challenges that arise when simultaneous virtual and physical message transmissions occur. The proposed architecture can be utilized as a high-fidelity network simulator for vehicular systems with implicit mobility models that are given by real trajectories of the vehicles. The architecture has been utilized within multiple projects dealing with the development and practical deployment of multi-UAV systems, which support the architecture’s viability and advantages. The provided experimental results show the achieved similarity of the communication characteristics of the fully deployed hardware setup to the setup utilizing the proposed mixed-reality architecture.
topic communication architecture
mixed-reality simulations
unmanned systems
middleware
testbeds
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/18/3/853
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