WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS: A SURVEY

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Mr.Chavan Rahul Raghunath
Mr.Chavan Rahul Barama

Abstract

A wireless sensor network (WSN) (sometimes called a wireless sensor and actuator network (WSAN) are spatially distributed autonomous sensors to monitor physical or environmental conditions,[2] such as temperature, sound, pressure, etc. and to cooperatively pass their data through the network to a main location. The more modern networks are bi-directional, also enabling control of sensor activity. The development of wireless sensor networks was motivated by military applications such as battlefield surveillance; today such networks are used in many industrial and consumer applications, such as industrial process monitoring and control, machine health monitoring, and so on. The WSN is built of "nodes" – from a few to several hundreds or even thousands, where each node is connected to one (or sometimes several) sensors. Each such sensor network node has typically several parts: a radio transceiver with an internal antenna or connection to an external antenna, a microcontroller, an electronic circuit for interfacing with the sensors and an energy source, usually a battery or an embedded form of energy harvesting. A sensor node might vary in size from that of a shoebox down to the size of a grain of dust, although functioning "motes" of genuine microscopic dimensions have yet to be created.

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Mr.Chavan Rahul Raghunath, & Mr.Chavan Rahul Barama. (2021). WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS: A SURVEY . International Journal of Innovations in Engineering Research and Technology, 1-7. https://repo.ijiert.org/index.php/ijiert/article/view/773
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How to Cite

Mr.Chavan Rahul Raghunath, & Mr.Chavan Rahul Barama. (2021). WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS: A SURVEY . International Journal of Innovations in Engineering Research and Technology, 1-7. https://repo.ijiert.org/index.php/ijiert/article/view/773

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