columbia/enhants2011040771201104072011-04-07columbia/enhantsDataset of radiant light energy measurements.This dataset includes radiant light energy measurements from a study by Columbia
University's EnHANTs (Energy Harvesting Active Networked Tags) project.the initial version2011-04-072009-08-142010-11-23gorlatova:networkingTraces at EnHANTs website249250251252253254http://www.crawdad.org/columbia/enhantshttp://www.crawdad.org/wiki/pmwiki.php?n=Main.Dataset.columbia-enhantssensor networkEnergy-efficient Wireless NetworkTo characterize indoor energy availability, since 2009 we have been conducting
a light energy measurement study in office buildings in New York City. In this
study we take longterm measurements of irradiance (I, in units W/cm^2) in
several indoor locations, and also a set of shorter-term indoor/outdoor mobile
device measurements.For the measurements we use TAOS TSL230rd photometric sensors installed on
LabJack U3 DAQ devices. These photometric sensors have a high dynamic range,
allowing capturing of widely varying irradiance conditions. We verified the
accuracy of the sensors with a NIST-traceable Newport 818-UV photodetector.Long-term data was collected in static locations on campus of Columbia
University. Shorter-term experiments were collected by mobile devices.There are multi-day interruptions in data due to power interruptions and device
malfunctions.101201104072011-04-07the initial version.columbia/enhants/energyRadiant light energy measurements collected by Columbia University's EnHANTs
project.This traceset includes radiant light energy measurements collected from 2009
to 2010 in a study by Columbia University's EnHANTs project.2011-04-072009-06-252010-11-23Energy-efficient Wireless NetworkSince June 2009, we have been recording irradiance every 30 seconds in several
different static locations using TAOS TSL230rd light-to-frequency converters
installed on Lab-Jack U3 Data Acquisition boards. We also conducted several
short-term experiments where measurement was conducted by sensor devices as
they were moved around New York city.There are multi-day interruptions in data due to power interruptions and device
malfunctions.columbia/enhants317201104072011-04-07the initial versioncolumbia/enhants/energy/stationaryStationary measurements of irradiance done by Columbia University's EnHANTs
project.This trace consists of long-term irradiance measurements taken at 6 static
locations on the campus of Columbia University.false2011-04-072009-06-252010-11-23Traces A-F were made in stationary setups indoors.
A. Students' office, South-facing, 6th floor above ground; measurement setup
located on a windowsill; shading is used at all times. Trace starts on
August 14, 2009 and is provided here to September 13, 2009.
B. Students' office (same as setup A); setup on a bookshelf far from the
window, receiving direct sunlight for a short portion of a day.
Trace starts on November 13, 2009, and is provided here up to
November 23, 2010.
C. Departmental conference room, North-facing, with large windows and an
unobstructed view; setup located on a windowsill. Shading use varies
(corresponding to the needs and preferences of different affiliates using
the conference room). Trace starts on November 6, 2009, and is provided here
up to September 13, 2010.
D. Students' office; corner window facing South and West; setup placed on a
windowsill, shading extensively used. Trace starts on November 5, 2009, and
is provided here up to September 29, 2010.
E. Students' office directly under the office of setup A; setup on a
windowsill, limited use of shading. This was a pilot measurement, done from
June 25, 2009 to October 11, 2009.
F. Students' office, East-facing; setup on a windowsill; office window often
kept partially opened (the setup often receives unattenuated reflected
outdoor light). Trace starts on February 16, 2010, and is provided here up to
April 15, 2010.* The first column is the number of seconds since the beginning of the
experiment.
* The second column is the measured irradiance. The measurements are in units
of microwatts per cm^2. In records where the measured irradiance is less than
0.01, the file contains 'NaN' instead of the numeric value.
* The subsequent columns are the timestamp of the measurement, separated into:
year, month, day, hour, minute, second./download/columbia/enhants/SetupA_merged_2009_8_15_2010_9_13.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/SetupB_merged_2010_11_3_2010_11_24.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/SetupC_merged_2009_11_7_2010_9_13.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/SetupD_merged_2009_11_6_2010_9_28.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/SetupE_2009_6_25.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/SetupF_merged_2010_2_16_2010_4_15.txt.gzcolumbia/enhants/energy317201104072011-04-07the initial versioncolumbia/enhants/energy/mobileMobile measurements of irradiance done by Columbia University's EnHANTs project.This trace contains short-term irradiance measurements collected by moving
sensor devices.false2011-04-072010-04-052010-07-22* Indoor + Outdoor Mobile Measurements: pedestrian walking around university
campus (indoor and outdoor environments) carrying a sensor. Measurements
date: April 05, 2010.
* New York City Nighttime Measurements: pedestrian walking in New York City
(Theater District and Times Square) at nighttime, with a sensor attached to a
backpack. Measurements date: July 22, 2010.
* Car-based roadtrip (sensor attached to the dashboard).
* Commuting on public transit, sensor attached to a backpack, measurements
outdoors, indoors (office, subway, train).* The first column is the number of seconds since the beginning of the
experiment.
* The second column is the measured irradiance. The measurements are in units
of microwatts per cm^2. In records where the measured irradiance is less than
0.01, the file contains 'NaN' instead of the numeric value.
* The subsequent columns are the timestamp of the measurement, separated into:
year, month, day, hour, minute, second./download/columbia/enhants/mobile-indoor-outdoor.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/mobile-nyt-nighttime.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/mobile-car.txt.gz/download/columbia/enhants/mobile-commute.txt.gzcolumbia/enhants/energy249columbia/enhantsMaria Gorlatovamag2206@columbia.eduColumbia UniversityElectrical EngineeringPh.D. student910 CEPSR, Department of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027http://enhants.ee.columbia.edu/people/25-maria-gorlatova250columbia/enhantsMichael Zapasmcz2104@columbia.eduColumbia UniversityElectrical EngineeringUndergraduate studentDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027251columbia/enhantsEnlin XuVMTurboSoftware engineerVMTurbo, 400 Columbus Avenue, Valhalla, NY 10595252columbia/enhantsMatthias Bahlkembahlke@mit.eduMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyElectrical Engineering and Computer ScienceGraduate studentDepartment of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139(617)-324-2129253columbia/enhantsIoannis (John) Kymissisjohnkym@ee.columbia.eduColumbia UniversityElectrical EngineeringAssistant Professor1013 CEPSR, Department of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027(212)-854-4023(212)-932-9421http//kymissis.columbia.edu/john-kymissis254columbia/enhantsGil Zussmangil@ee.columbia.eduColumbia UniversityElectrical EngineeringAssistant Professor811 CEPSR, Department of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027212-854-8670(212)-932-9421http://www.ee.columbia.edu/~zussmangorlatova-networkingMaria GorlatovaAya WallwaterGil ZussmanNetworking Low-Power Energy Harvesting Devices: Measurements and AlgorithmsProceedings of IEEE Computer Communications Conference (IEEE INFOCOM'11)2011--04--IEEEShanghai, Chinahttp://enhants.ee.columbia.edu/images/CU-EE-2010-07-15a.pdfmeasurementwirelesscolumbia_enhantswireless-meas, crawdadcolumbia/enhants20110401