| Literature DB >> 31058833 |
Andrey V Savkin1, Hailong Huang2.
Abstract
This paper studies the problem of placing a set of drones for surveillance of a ground region. The main goal is to determine the minimum number of drones necessary to be deployed at a given altitude to monitor the region. An easily implementable algorithm to estimate the minimum number of drones and determine their locations is developed. Moreover, it is proved that this algorithm is asymptotically optimal in the sense that the ratio of the number of drones required by this algorithm and the minimum number of drones converges to one as the area of the ground region tends to infinity. The proof is based on Kershner's theorem from combinatorial geometry. Illustrative examples and comparisons with other existing methods show the efficiency of the developed algorithm.Entities:
Keywords: Kershner’s theorem; UAVs; aerial monitoring; aerial surveillance; coverage control; drones; flying robots; internet of drones; internet of flying robots; triangular coverage
Year: 2019 PMID: 31058833 PMCID: PMC6539925 DOI: 10.3390/s19092068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The visibility cone. Point can be seen by the drone while point cannot.
Figure 2A triangulation consisting of equilateral triangles.
Figure 3The centre of an equilateral triangle and the three congruent Voronoi cells, which are in different colors.
Figure 4Constructing region from region .
Figure 5The ground region .
Figure 6The number of drones N versus .
Figure 7Deployment of 19 drones at 109 m by the proposed approach. The green dash circles are the coverage areas of drones.
Figure 8The deployments by the algorithm of [19]. (a) and the drones are at the altitude 114 m. (b) and the drones are at the altitude 108 m.
Figure 9versus .