Abstract
As electromagnetic waves do not propagate well underwater,
acoustics plays a key role in underwater communication. Due to
significant differences in the characteristics of electromagnetic
and acoustic channels, networking protocols for underwater systems
differ from those developed for wired and wireless radio networks.
Various schemes have been proposed for one or many aspects of
underwater networks. However, no widely accepted common framework
exists for underwater acoustics to unify these proposed schemes
into a functional underwater network. The availability of such a
framework will enable easy integration of independently developed
techniques and thus accelerate the pace of research in underwater
acoustic networking.
In order for a common framework to be successful, it needs to
have a wide acceptance. To gain such an acceptance, a framework
needs to take into account a wide variety of different constraints
and requirements for various underwater applications. This requires
inputs from various research groups and end users. To help define
the use cases and a common framework for underwater networking, a
joint effort has been initiated between acoustic communication
research groups at the Acoustic Research Laboratory (National
University of Singapore), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In this paper, we
discuss the first draft of the framework specifications from this
effort. We welcome feedback from the underwater acoustic research
community and potential end users of underwater networking
systems.
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