84038 From Soil to the Cloud: Permanent Wireless Underground Sensors for Autonomous Irrigation.

See more from this Division: Live Streaming CEU Program
See more from this Session: Irrigated Crop Water Management Using Soil Sensing Technologies

Tuesday, November 5, 2013: 1:20 PM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 37 and 38

Mehmet C Vuran, Computer Science and Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE
Abstract:
The recent developments in low-power wireless communication, distributed sensing, and networking allow sensor networks to be deployed in places where no computer has gone before. Wireless underground sensor networks are an emerging type of sensor networks, where sensors are located under the ground and communicate through soil. Their applications involve precision agriculture, environment monitoring, and border patrol. Due to the significant impacts of the soil dynamics on communication, unique challenges exist for the development of networking solutions in this media. The recent developments in wireless underground networking and its applications to precision agriculture control will be described. Cyber-Physical Networking Laboratory Underground Sensing and Precision Agriculture Testbed at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and recent experiments with center pivot irrigation system deployments in this testbed will be discussed.

See more from this Division: Live Streaming CEU Program
See more from this Session: Irrigated Crop Water Management Using Soil Sensing Technologies