Temporal variations of IEEE 802.11b signal strengths in an in-building environment


Autoria(s): Mogili, Roopa
Contribuinte(s)

Agrawala, Ashok

Electrical Engineering

Shankar, Udaya

Electrical Engineering

Data(s)

31/05/2004

31/05/2004

04/12/2003

Resumo

Recent popularity of the IEEE 802.11b Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) in a host of current-day applications has instigated a suite of research challenges. The 802.11b WLANs are highly reliable and wide spread. In this work, we study the temporal characteristics of RSSI in the real-working environment by conducting a controlled set of experiments. Our results indicate that a significant variability in the RSSI can occur over time. Some of this variability in the RSSI may be due to systematic causes while the other component can be expressed as stochastic noise. We present an analysis of both these aspects of RSSI. We treat the moving average of the RSSI as the systematic causes and the noise as the stochastic causes. We give a reasonable estimate for the moving average to compute the noise accurately. We attribute the changes in the environment such as the movement of people and the noise associated with the NIC circuitry and the network access point as causes for this variability. We find that the results of our analysis are of primary importance to active research areas such as location determination of users in a WLAN. The techniques used in some of the RF-based WLAN location determination systems, exploit the characteristics of the RSSI presented in this work to infer the location of a wireless client in a WLAN. Thus our results form the building blocks for other users of the exact characteristics of the RSSI.

Formato

2659420 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1903/27

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

Digital Repository at the University of Maryland

University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)

Palavras-Chave #Engineering, Electronics and Electrical
Tipo

Thesis