Nowadays, set of cooperative drones are commonly used as aerial sensors, in order to monitor areas and track objects of interest (think, e.g., of border and coastal security and surveillance, crime control, disaster management, emergency first responder, forest and wildlife, traffic monitoring). The drones generate a quite large and continuous in time multimodal (audio, video and telemetry) data stream towards a ground control station with enough computing power and resources to store and process it. Hence, due to the distributed nature of this setting, further complicated by the movement and varying distance among drones, and to possible interferences and obstacles compromising communications, a common clock between the nodes is of utmost importance to make feasible a correct reconstruction of the multimodal data stream from the single datagrams, which may be received out of order or with different delays. A framework architecture, using sub-GHz broadcasting communications, is proposed to ensure time synchronization for a set of drones, allowing one to recover even in difficult situations where the usual time sources, e.g. GPS, NTP etc., are not available for all the devices. Such architecture is then implemented and tested using LoRa radios and Raspberry Pi computers. However, other sub-GHz technologies can be used in the place of LoRa, and other kinds of single-board computers can substitute the Raspberry Pis, making the proposed solution easily customizable, according to specific needs. Moreover, the proposal is low cost, since it does not require expensive hardware like, e.g., onboard Rubidium based atomic clocks. Our experiments indicate a worst case skew of about 16 ms between drones clocks, using cheap components commonly available in the market. This is sufficient to deal with audio/video footage at 30 fps. Hence, it can be viewed as a useful and easy to implement architecture helping to maintain a decent synchronization even when traditional solutions are not available.
A broadcast sub-GHz framework for unmanned aerial vehicles clock synchronization
Scagnetto I.;Toma A.;Drioli C.;Foresti G. L.
2023-01-01
Abstract
Nowadays, set of cooperative drones are commonly used as aerial sensors, in order to monitor areas and track objects of interest (think, e.g., of border and coastal security and surveillance, crime control, disaster management, emergency first responder, forest and wildlife, traffic monitoring). The drones generate a quite large and continuous in time multimodal (audio, video and telemetry) data stream towards a ground control station with enough computing power and resources to store and process it. Hence, due to the distributed nature of this setting, further complicated by the movement and varying distance among drones, and to possible interferences and obstacles compromising communications, a common clock between the nodes is of utmost importance to make feasible a correct reconstruction of the multimodal data stream from the single datagrams, which may be received out of order or with different delays. A framework architecture, using sub-GHz broadcasting communications, is proposed to ensure time synchronization for a set of drones, allowing one to recover even in difficult situations where the usual time sources, e.g. GPS, NTP etc., are not available for all the devices. Such architecture is then implemented and tested using LoRa radios and Raspberry Pi computers. However, other sub-GHz technologies can be used in the place of LoRa, and other kinds of single-board computers can substitute the Raspberry Pis, making the proposed solution easily customizable, according to specific needs. Moreover, the proposal is low cost, since it does not require expensive hardware like, e.g., onboard Rubidium based atomic clocks. Our experiments indicate a worst case skew of about 16 ms between drones clocks, using cheap components commonly available in the market. This is sufficient to deal with audio/video footage at 30 fps. Hence, it can be viewed as a useful and easy to implement architecture helping to maintain a decent synchronization even when traditional solutions are not available.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.