Barbeau / Kranakis | Principles of Ad-hoc Networking | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 274 Seiten, E-Book

Barbeau / Kranakis Principles of Ad-hoc Networking


1. Auflage 2007
ISBN: 978-0-470-51248-7
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)

E-Book, Englisch, 274 Seiten, E-Book

ISBN: 978-0-470-51248-7
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



Principles of Ad Hoc Networking presents a systematicintroduction to the fundamentals of ad hoc networks.
An ad-hoc network is a small network, especially one withwireless or temporary plug-in connections. Typically, some of thenetwork devices are part of the network only for the duration of acommunications session or, in the case of mobile or portabledevices, while in some close proximity to the rest of the network.These networks can range from small and static systems withconstrained power resources to larger-scale dynamic and mobileenvironments. Wireless ad hoc networks facilitate numerous anddiverse applications for establishing survivable dynamic systems inemergency and rescue operations, disaster relief and intelligenthome settings.
Principles of Ad Hoc Networking:
* Introduces the essential characteristics of ad hoc networkssuch as: physical layer, medium access control, Bluetooth discoveryand network formation, wireless network programming andprotocols.
* Explains the crucial components involved in ad-hoc networks indetail with numerous exercises to aid understanding.
* Offers key results and merges practical methodologies withmathematical considerations.
Principles of Ad Hoc Networking will prove essentialreading for graduate students in Computer Science, ElectricalEngineering, Applied Mathematics and Physics as well as researchersin the field of ad hoc networking, professionals in wirelesstelecoms, and networking system developers.
Check out www.scs.carleton.ca/~barbeau/pahn/index.htm forfurther reading, sample chapters, a bibliography and lectureslides!

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Weitere Infos & Material


Preface.
Glossary.
1. Wireless Data Communications.
1.1 Signal Representation.
1.2 Analog to Digital Conversion.
1.3 Digital to Analog Conversion.
1.4 Architecture of an SDR Application.
1.5 Quadrature Modulation and Demodulation.
1.6 Spread Spectrum.
1.7 Antenna.
1.8 Propagation.
1.9 Ultrawideband.
1.10 Energy Management.
1.11 Exercise.
2. Medium Access Control.
2.1 Fundamentals of Probability and Statistics.
2.2 Modeling Traffic.
2.3 Multiple Access.
2.4 Demand Assigned Multiple Access.
2.5 Carrier Sense Multiple Access in IEEE 802.11.
2.6 Medium Access Control in ad hov Networks.
2.7 Bibliographic Comments.
2.8 Exercises.
3. Ad Hov Wireless Access.
3.1 Management of Bluetooth Networks.
3.2 Model for Node Discovery in Bluetooth.
3.3 Bluetooth Formation Algorithms.
3.4 Mesh Mode of WiMAX/802.16.
3.5 Bibliographic Comments.
Exercises.
4. Wireless Network Programming.
4.1 Structure of Information.
4.2 Socket.
4.3 Parameters and Control.
4.4 Receiving Frames.
4.5 Sending Frames.
4.6 Exercises.
5. Ad Hov Networks Protocols.
5.1 Normal IP Routing.
5.2 The Reactive Approach.
5.3 The Proactive Approach.
5.4 The Hybrid Approach.
5.5 Clustering.
5.6 Quality of Service.
5.7 Sensor Network Protocols.
5.8 Exercises.
6. Location Awareness.
6.1 Geographic Proximity.
6.2 Constructing Spanners of ad hov Networks.
6.3 Information Dissemination.
6.4 Geographic Location Determination.
6.5 Random Unit Disc Graphs.
6.6 Coverage and Connectivity with Directional Sensors.
6.7 Bibliographic Comments.
6.8 Exercises.
7. Ad Hov Networks Security.
7.1 Authentication Techniques.
7.2 Physical Layer Attacks.
7.3 Security of Application Protocols.
7.4 Biometrics-based Key Establishment.
7.5 Routing Security.
7.6 Broadcast Security.
7.7 Secure Location Verification.
7.8 Security in Directional Antenna Systems.
7.9 Bibliographic Comments.
7.10 Exercises.
Bibliography.
Index.


Michel Barbeau is Professor in the School of ComputerScience at Carleton University, Canada. His topics ofinterest are Telecommunications Software and Distributed Systems,Mobile and Wireless Networks, Satellite Communications and WirelessSecurity. Michel is on the editorial board of the EngineeringLetters of the International Association of Engineers, and has beena co-chair and programme committee member of a number of scientificconferences. Since 2003, he has led a major research projectentitled Complex Adaptive Networks for Computing and Communicationin the MITACS (Mathematics of Information Technology and ComplexSystems) NCE (Networks of Centers of Excellence).
Evangelos Kranakis is Professor in the School of ComputerScience at Carleton University, which he joined in 1991. He iscurrently CNS (Communication, Networks, and Security) Theme Leaderin the MITACS NCE. He has published in the area of theanalysis of algorithms, bioinformatics, communication and data (adhoc and wireless) networks, computational and combinatorialgeometry, distributed computing, network security.



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