2009-09-30

[Tccc] CFP: 2nd International Workshop on Underwater Networks (WUnderNet), May 2010

[Apologies for multiple postings]

2nd International Workshop on Underwater Networks
(WUnderNet 2010)
http://www1.i2r.a-star.edu.sg/~hptan/WUnderNet2010
In conjunction with IEEE ICC
Capetown, South Africa, May 2010.

More than 70% of the earth's surface is covered by water. Despite having strong influences and impact on climate regulation, nutrient production, oil retrieval and transportation, the oceans remain the least explored frontiers of this planet and many oceanic and maritime applications seem relatively slow in exploiting the state-of-the-art info-communications technologies. The natural and man-made disasters that have taken place over the last few years have aroused significant interest in monitoring oceanic environments for scientific, environmental, commercial, safety, homeland security and military needs. The shipbuilding and offshore engineering industries are also increasingly interested in technologies like sensor networks as an economically viable alternative to currently adopted and costly methods used in seismic monitoring, structural health monitoring, installation and mooring, etc.

The technology used in current remote telemetry and in-situ local sensing systems leaves much to be desired. Ideally, there should be highly precise, real-time, fine grained spatial sampling of the target environment, be it a physical structure like an oil rig, or the ocean bed in the vicinity of frequent seismic activities. Wireless terrestrial ad hoc and sensor networks have been studied extensively but the notion of a wireless underwater network is relatively new due to the lack of an efficient underwater communications technology. The existing viable underwater communications technology is acoustic communications, which is characterized by severely limited range-dependent bandwidth and attenuation, extensive time-varying multipath propagation, long propagation times, and high temporal errors. This is a drastic change from the radio channel used by terrestrial wireless sensor networks and presents new challenges for every aspect of the network protocol suite.
The goal of this workshop is to bring together researchers and industry experts in areas relevant to underwater networks. Different aspects of the protocol stack from the physical layer to the application layer, as well as cross-layer issues, will be represented. The objective is to serve as a forum for presenting state-of-the-art research, exchanging ideas and experiences, and facilitating interaction and collaboration.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

. Underwater network architecture design
. Novel / Cognitive communications techniques
. Cooperative communications
. Acoustic signal propagation and physical layer issues (modulation, waveform, MIMO etc)
. Delay-Tolerant Networking
. Distributed Signal Processing
. Network coding
. Medium access control
. Routing and data delivery
. Reliability and robustness
. Security Issues
. Power management
. New underwater energy sources
. Localization and synchronization
. Data fusion and aggregation
. Cross layer Optimization
. Performance modeling and simulations
. New applications for underwater networks

Committee

Workshop General Chair
Winston Seah, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

TPC Chairs
Hwee-Pink Tan, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore
Jan Erik Hakegard, SINTEF, Norway

TPC Members
To be finalized.

Manuscript Submission

Prospective authors are invited to submit original technical papers by the deadline 15th November 2009 for publication in the IEEE ICC 2010 Conference Proceedings.

All submissions should be written in English with a maximum paper length of five (5) printed pages (10-point font) including figures without incurring additional page charges (maximum 1 additional page with overlength page charge if accepted). Standard IEEE Transactions templates for Microsoft Word or LaTeX formats can be found at http://www.ieee.org/portal/pages/pubs/transactions/stylesheets.html.

Only PDF files are acceptable for the review process and all submissions must be done through EDAS.

Important dates

Submission deadline: November 15, 2009
Notification of Acceptance: January 1, 2010
Final Manuscripts Due: February 1, 2010
Workshop Date: TBD



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