Number of sensors versus time to detection in wildfires
Pablo I. FierensPhysics and Mathematics Department, Instituto Tecnológico de Buenos Aires (ITBA), Av. Madero 399, Buenos Aires, (C1106ACD) Argentina. Email: pfierens@itba.edu.ar
International Journal of Wildland Fire 18(7) 825-829 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF07137
Submitted: 20 September 2007 Accepted: 19 February 2009 Published: 27 October 2009
Abstract
The lack of extensive research in the application of inexpensive wireless sensor nodes for the early detection of wildfires motivated us to investigate the cost of such a network. As a first step, in this paper we present several results that relate the time to detection and the burned area to the number of sensor nodes in the region that is protected. We prove that the probability distribution of the size of the burned area at the moment of detection is approximately exponential, given that some hypotheses hold: the positions of the sensor nodes are independent random variables uniformly distributed and the number of sensor nodes is large. This conclusion depends neither on the number of ignition points nor on the propagation model of the fire.
Acknowledgements
This work was partially supported by anonymous contributors through the project ‘Prevention and Early Detection of Forest Fires by Means of Sensor Networks’, which is being developed at ITBA. We also wish to thank our anonymous referees for their insightful comments.
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