Wireless and wireline network interactions in disaster scenarios

The fast and unrelenting spread of wireless telecommunication devices has changed the landscape of the telecommunication world, as we know it. Today we find that most users have access to both wireline and wireless communication devices. This widespread availability of alternate modes of communication is adding, on one hand, to a redundancy in networks, yet, on the other hand, has cross network impacts during overloads and disruptions. This being the case, it behooves network designers and service providers to understand how this redundancy works so that it can be better utilized in emergency conditions where the need for redundancy is critical. In this paper, we examine the scope of this redundancy as expressed by telecommunications availability to users under different failure scenarios. We quantify the interaction of wireline and wireless networks during network failures and traffic overloads. Developed as part of a Department of Homeland Security Infrastructure Protection (DHS IP) project, the network simulation modeling and analysis research tool (N-SMART) was used to perform this study. The product of close technical collaboration between the National Infrastructure Simulation and Analysis Center (NISAC) and Lucent Technologies, N-SMART supports detailed wireline and wireless network simulations and detailed user calling behavior

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