Abstract

We study a scenario where multiple drone-mounted base stations cruise freely over a macro hotspot to serve mobile users on the ground. The drone base stations move constantly and update their moving directions following our proposed mobility control algorithm. The constant movement of drones reduces the distance between the base stations and users, which in turn improves the probability of having a line of sight connection. We consider a practical user association scheme for the moving base stations, which enables user equipments to switch their serving base stations based only on the received signal strength. via extensive simulations, we demonstrate that the drone base stations moving according to our proposed algorithms can improve the average packet throughput by 82% and the 5th-percentile packet throughput by 430% compared to a baseline scenario, where drones hover over fixed locations. These improvements can be realized regardless of users’ and base stations’ density. The constant movement of the drones also helps reduce the total number of drones required to cover the macro hotspot.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call