Unmanned aerial vehicles: Communications challenges and future aerial networking

The use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) will grow rapidly in the next decade. These remotely piloted or preprogrammed aircraft are envisioned for applications in numerous civil settings, including industrial monitoring, scientific data gathering, agriculture, public safety, and search and rescue. Many other applications - presently unforeseen - will inevitably also arise. These vehicles, also known as unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and by the unfortunate misnomer of "drones," must be integrated into the national airspace system in the United States, and into the airspace worldwide. A natural concern in the use of UAS is safety, and this has direct implications for the control and non-payload communication (CNPC) systems that must be used to operate UAS. Similarly, navigation and surveillance functions must be made more reliable and more accurate. Because of these factors, many UAS research, development, testing, and standardization efforts are underway by governments, industries, and academia. Despite the fact that piloted civil aircraft have been flying safely for decades, UAS CNPC presents distinct new challenges in the form of different flight profiles, e.g., low-elevation flights and more high-dynamic maneuvers; wider required bandwidths, e.g., for video; and different ground site characteristics such as locations in cluttered areas and lower elevation antennas. In this paper we first review our work for NASA on the characterization of the UAS air-ground channel, and our ongoing efforts in evaluation of radio technologies and UAS networking performance. We highlight related significant work in the area and identify the newest challenges in UAS communications and networking. The final part of the paper presents information on trends and opportunities in the vibrant field of UAS communications and networking.

[1]  Weifeng Su,et al.  Maximum Achievable Capacity in Airborne MIMO Communications with Arbitrary Alignments of Linear Transceiver Antenna Arrays , 2013, IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications.

[2]  John Horgan The drones come home , 2013 .

[3]  M. J. Gans,et al.  Enhancing Connectivity of Unmanned Vehicles through MIMO Communications , 2013, 2013 IEEE 78th Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC Fall).

[4]  Vincent K. N. Lau,et al.  The Mobile Radio Propagation Channel , 2007 .

[5]  Kyle Wesson,et al.  Hacking drones. , 2013, Scientific American.

[6]  Bow-Nan Cheng,et al.  Design considerations for next-generation airborne tactical networks , 2014, IEEE Communications Magazine.

[7]  Christian Bettstetter,et al.  Channel measurements over 802.11a-based UAV-to-ground links , 2011, 2011 IEEE GLOBECOM Workshops (GC Wkshps).

[8]  L. M. Sherer,et al.  RADIO TECHNICAL COMMISSION FOR AERONAUTICS , 1947 .

[9]  Alain Azoulay,et al.  Survey on the Future Aeronautical Communication System and Its Development for Continental Communications , 2013, IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology.

[10]  Rapport DU Capscaafrica,et al.  INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION ORGANIZATION , 1947, International Organization.

[11]  D. W. Matolak,et al.  Air-ground channels & models: Comprehensive review and considerations for unmanned aircraft systems , 2012, 2012 IEEE Aerospace Conference.

[12]  Raj Jain,et al.  Requirements, Challenges and Analysis of Alternatives for Wireless Datalinks for Unmanned Aircraft Systems , 2012, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications.

[13]  James Wheeler,et al.  Evaluation of a Multihop Airborne IP Backbone with Heterogeneous Radio Technologies , 2014, IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing.

[14]  David W. Matolak,et al.  Initial results for air-ground channel measurements & modeling for unmanned aircraft systems: Over-sea , 2014, 2014 IEEE Aerospace Conference.

[15]  Yifeng Zhou,et al.  Communication architectures and protocols for networking unmanned aerial vehicles , 2013, 2013 IEEE Globecom Workshops (GC Wkshps).

[16]  Karina Mabell Gomez,et al.  On the performance of aerial LTE base-stations for public safety and emergency recovery , 2013, 2013 IEEE Globecom Workshops (GC Wkshps).