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Connect Everywhere: Wireless Connectivity in Protected Areas

Mobile connectivity has become more important, especially for visitors to parks and protected areas. However, governments' policies prohibit cable wiring in these areas in order to preserve the beauty and protect the historical interest of the landscape. Through observed practices from other co...

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Published in:arXiv.org 2021-10
Main Authors: Dlamini, Thembelihle, Mengistu Abera Mulatu, Vilakati, Sifiso
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Mengistu Abera Mulatu
Vilakati, Sifiso
description Mobile connectivity has become more important, especially for visitors to parks and protected areas. However, governments' policies prohibit cable wiring in these areas in order to preserve the beauty and protect the historical interest of the landscape. Through observed practices from other countries, mobile network operators and other licensed service providers can cooperate with the administrators of such protected areas in order to provide mobile connectivity without disturbing the environment. However, the most pervasive problem is the high energy consumption of the wireless systems and it becomes expensive to power them using the electricity grid. One attractive solution is to make use of green energy to power the communication systems and then share the base station (BS) infrastructure that is co-located with the edge server, an entity responsible for computing the offloaded delay-sensitive workloads. To alleviate this problem, this paper offers a resource management solution that seeks to minimize the energy consumption per communication site through (i) BS infrastructure and resource sharing, and (ii) assisted (peer-to-peer) computation offloading for the energy-constrained communication sites, within a protected area. Using this resource management strategy guarantees a Quality of Service (QoS). The performance evaluation conducted through simulations validates our analysis as the prediction variations observed shows greater accuracy between the harvested energy and the traffic load. Towards energy savings, the proposed algorithm achieves a 52 % energy savings when compared with the 46 % obtained by our benchmark algorithm. The energy savings that can be achieved decreases as the QoS is prioritized, within each communication site, and when the number of active computing resources increases.
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subjects Algorithms
Clean energy
Communication
Communications systems
Computation offloading
Connectivity
Edge computing
Electric power grids
Electricity distribution
Energy consumption
Infrastructure
Performance evaluation
Power consumption
Resource management
Wiring
title Connect Everywhere: Wireless Connectivity in Protected Areas
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