《15_Enabling Localization Services in Single and Multihop Wireless Networks》.pdf
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CHAPTER 15
ENABLING LOCALIZATION SERVICES
IN SINGLE AND MULTIHOP WIRELESS
NETWORKS
VASILEIOS LAKAFOSIS, RUSHI VYAS, and MANOS M. TENTZERIS
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
15.1 INTRODUCTION
Localization is the process of determining the physical positions of devices with a
specific degree of accuracy in indoor or outdoor environments. The physical location
of a user, device, or mote within an area covered by a wireless network can prove to
be a very useful or even indispensable functionality in many applications. First of all,
high correlation between data captured—for instance, environmental— and locality
may be required for the data to be meaningful. Device tracking, involving location
and bearing, is another type of application that makes use of different localization
techniques. Location awareness is also the basic component of a special category of
routing protocols, namely, geographic aware ones, where the traffic is relayed to or
from a particular area of the sensing field. Finally, context-aware applications can
make smarter decisions in terms of user interface or behavior when knowledge of the
physical location of the nodes is available.
This chapter reviews the most representative and reliable localization techniques,
most of which can be easily deployed in existing networks, as well as presents how
these have been expanded to provide localization solutions suitable for environments
where mostly multihop connectivity can be established with anchor nodes; nodes
whose exact location coordinates are known a priori.
It should be noted that most of these techniques are based on methods used
since ancient and medieval times by Thales from Miletus, Claudius Ptolemaus, Leon
Battista Alberti, and others [1] and are still used mostly in navigation systems.
Handbook of Smart Antennas for RFID Systems, Edited by Nemai Chandra Karmakar
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