In terms of economic consequences—including accidents, traffic delays, property loss, and injuries or casualties—fog can be as damaging as winter storms. Common fog-detection systems include satellites, visibility sensors, and human observations, but such methods can suffer from low spatial resolution, high cost, or low sensitivity near ground level, where the information may be particularly needed. A solution might be found, however, in cellular communication networks. Most microwave links in a network’s infrastructure currently operate at frequencies between roughly 6 GHz and 40 GHz. Although rainfall produces measurable attenuation of signals at those frequencies, dense fog has a relatively slight effect. But to satisfy the growing demand for higher data rates and wider bandwidth, many countries are turning to higher frequencies, 70–80 GHz. Noam David, Omry Sendik, Hagit Messer, and Pinhas Alpert from Tel Aviv University show that because transmission at those frequencies is much more sensitive to fog, the new...
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1 March 2015
March 01 2015
Monitoring fog with cellular network infrastructure
Physics Today 68 (3), 17 (2015);
Citation
Richard J. Fitzgerald; Monitoring fog with cellular network infrastructure. Physics Today 1 March 2015; 68 (3): 17. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.2711
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