February 11th and 12th
Roberto Calvo Palomino (IMDEA Networks Institute)
Today's spectrum measurements are mainly performed by governmental agencies which drive around using expensive specialized hardware. Each country creates and maintains its own national frequency allocation plan which describes how the EM spectrum shall be used. Despite, the EM spectrum is well-organized in terms of frequency allocation, its actual usage in different geographical places and times is not well-known at all. The idea of distributed spectrum monitoring has recently gained attention to capture the real-time usage of the wireless spectrum at large geographical scale.
We propose to analyze, design and build a distributed sensoring platform based on low-cost hardware nodes to analyze the spectrum collaboratively. The main advantage of low-end distributed solutions is that they may allow to create a wide-scale and real-time spectrum monitoring system. Collaborating to reach a common goal has the potential of:
We aim to reach this goal addressing the following fundamental research questions:
During the activity we will talk about the challenges of the project, how to solve them and we will tell the actual state of the project. Also we could show a live demo of one of ours sensors working.
More information at: http://persys.networks.imdea.org/wideband-spectrum-monitoring-system-1
Thursday 11/02/2016
19:15 - 19:45
Track 1
Salón de Grados
Roberto is a PhD student at IMDEA Networks Institute associated to UC3M university. Roberto received his MsC degree in Telematic Engineering from Universidad Carlos III (2014) and MsC degree in Telematics System and Computer Science from Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in 2010. He was working in European projects during the period from 2008-2013. Nowadays he is working in his PhD focused in collaborative wideband spectrum monitoring to create distributed and collaborative algorithms to create a smart platform to detect anomalies and coverage the spectrum in a new way.