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RESEARCHERS DEMONSTRATE NEW WIRELESS DISASTER RESPONSE SYSTEM
18 June 2003 - Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Members of the Center for Wireless Telecommunications of Virginia Tech demonstrated their newly developed broadband communications system at the Digital Government Research Conference (DGO 2003) in Boston recently. This system will provide vital connectivity in disaster response situations such as 9-11. They also gave a similar demonstration at Science Applications International Corporation's Public Safety Integration Center in Herndon.

Members of the Center for Wireless Telecommunications of Virginia Tech demonstrated their newly developed broadband communications system at the Digital Government Research Conference (DGO 2003) in Boston recently. This system will provide vital connectivity in disaster response situations such as 9-11. They also gave a similar demonstration at Science Applications International Corporation's Public Safety Integration Center in Herndon.

An impulse-type channel sounder based on ultra-wideband radio technology is an important feature of the project. Its operational application is to support rapid deployment of the center's broadband communications system by identifying usable radio paths (particularly non-line-of-sight or NLOS paths), characterizing the paths' transmission characteristics, and adapting the transmitters and receivers for optimum performance over these paths.

CWT faculty member Bill Carstensen developed and partially validated a geographic information system tool called GETWEBS to quickly assess deployment locations for the project's hub and remote units. The tool uses GIS data to quickly compute "view-sheds" based on radio parameters and radio frequency propagation models. In a deployment scenario, GETWEBS can be used for what-if analyses as equipment is in transit to recommend specific deployment locations.

Team members who attended the DGO 2003 conference were Charles Bostian, CWT's engineering coordinator, Scott Midkiff, Tim Gallagher, and graduate research assistant Mary Miniuk.

http://www.vt.edu

About: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
From a meagre beginning in October of 1872, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, popularly known as Virginia Tech, has evolved into a comprehensive university of national and international prominence. As Virginia's largest university with 25,600 students and one of the top 50 research institutions in the nation, it is an institution that firmly embraces a history of putting knowledge to work. That tradition is rooted in our motto, Ut Prosim: "That I May Serve," and our land-grant missions of instruction, research, and solving the problems of society through public service and outreach activities.


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