Abstract

Infiltration-route analysis is a military application of geospatial information system (GIS) technology. In order to find susceptible routes, optimal-path-searching algorithms are applied to minimize the cost function, which is the summed result of detection probability. The cost function was determined according to the thermal observation device (TOD) detection probability, the viewshed analysis results, and two feature layers extracted from the vector product interim terrain data. The detection probability is computed and recorded for an individual cell (50 m × 50 m), and the optimal infiltration routes are determined with A* algorithm by minimizing the summed costs on the routes from a start point to an end point. In the present study, in order to simulate the dynamic nature of a real-world problem, one thousand cost surfaces in the GIS environment were generated with randomly located TODs and randomly selected infiltration start points. Accordingly, one thousand sets of vulnerable routes for infiltration purposes could be found, which could be accumulated and presented as an infiltration vulnerability map. This application can be further utilized for both optimal infiltration routing and surveillance network design. Indeed, dynamic simulation in the GIS environment is considered to be a powerful and practical solution for optimization problems. A similar approach can be applied to the dynamic optimal routing for civil infrastructure, which requires consideration of terrain-related constraints and cost functions.

Highlights

  • Routing analysis has been one of the most popular research topics in geospatial-related fields

  • The objective of this study is to present a solution for optimal infiltration-route analysis with thermal observation device (TOD) in a geospatial information system (GIS) environment and to confirm its validity for computationally intensive simulation environment

  • This paper presents a computational environment for infiltration-route analysis that can discover infiltration vulnerability

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Summary

Introduction

Routing analysis has been one of the most popular research topics in geospatial-related fields. Geospatial information has been widely used for military applications as well, and its importance in modern warfare is considered to be very valuable. It has become possible to analyze the terrain conditions of inaccessible areas with various sources of data collection sensors. The increased spatial and spectral resolutions of sensors support more detailed analyses of terrain conditions. Geospatial information has been a primary resource for various military tactical applications, such as mission planning, terrain-contour matching for cruise-missiles and aircraft, viewshed analyses, infiltration-route analysis, impact – point analysis, hidden-point analysis, and urban–battle analysis [7,8,9,10,11]

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