Impact of MAC delay on AUV localization: Underwater localization based on hyperbolic frequency modulation signal

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Abstract

Medium Access Control (MAC) delay which occurs between the anchor node’s transmissions is one of the error sources in underwater localization. In particular, in AUV localization, the MAC delay significantly degrades the ranging accuracy. The Cramer-Rao Low Bound (CRLB) definition theoretically proves that the MAC delay significantly degrades the localization performance. This paper proposes underwater localization combined with multiple access technology to decouple the localization performance from the MAC delay. Towards this goal, we adopt hyperbolic frequency modulation (HFM) signal that provides multiplexing based on its good property, high-temporal correlation. Owing to the multiplexing ability of the HFM signal, the anchor nodes can transmit packets without MAC delay, i.e., simultaneous transmission is possible. In addition, the simulation results show that the simultaneous transmission is not an optional communication scheme, but essential for the localization of mobile object in underwater.

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APA

Kim, S., & Yoo, Y. (2018). Impact of MAC delay on AUV localization: Underwater localization based on hyperbolic frequency modulation signal. Sensors (Switzerland), 18(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/s18020356

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