Telemetry


Telemetry is the
Although the term commonly refers to wireless data transfer mechanisms (e.g., using radio, ultrasonic, or infrared systems), it also encompasses data transferred over other media such as a telephone or computer network, optical link or other wired communications like power line carriers. Many modern telemetry systems take advantage of the low cost and ubiquity of GSM networks by using SMS to receive and transmit telemetry data.
A telemeter is a physical device used in telemetry. It consists of a sensor, a transmission path, and a display, recording, or control device. Electronic devices are widely used in telemetry and can be wireless or hard-wired, analog or digital. Other technologies are also possible, such as mechanical, hydraulic and optical.[3]
Telemetry may be commutated to allow the transmission of multiple data streams in a fixed frame.
History
The beginning of industrial telemetry lies in the
Although the original telemeter referred to a ranging device (the
In the 1930s use of electrical telemeters grew rapidly. The electrical strain gauge was widely used in rocket and aviation research and the
Carrying on from rocket research, radio telemetry was used routinely as space exploration got underway. Spacecraft are in a place where a physical connection is not possible, leaving radio or other electromagnetic waves (such as infrared lasers) as the only viable option for telemetry. During crewed space missions it is used to monitor not only parameters of the vehicle, but also the health and life support of the astronauts.[8] During the Cold War telemetry found uses in espionage. US intelligence found that they could monitor the telemetry from Soviet missile tests by building a telemeter of their own to intercept the radio signals and hence learn a great deal about Soviet capabilities.[9]
Types of telemeter
Telemeters are the physical devices used in telemetry. It consists of a sensor, a transmission path, and a display, recording, or control device. Electronic devices are widely used in telemetry and can be wireless or hard-wired, analog or digital. Other technologies are also possible, such as mechanical, hydraulic and optical.[10]
Telemetering information over wire had its origins in the 19th century. One of the first data-transmission circuits was developed in 1845 between the Russian Tsar's Winter Palace and army headquarters. In 1874, French engineers built a system of weather and snow-depth sensors on Mont Blanc that transmitted real-time information to Paris. In 1901 the American inventor C. Michalke patented the selsyn, a circuit for sending synchronized rotation information over a distance. In 1906 a set of seismic stations were built with telemetering to the Pulkovo Observatory in Russia. In 1912, Commonwealth Edison developed a system of telemetry to monitor electrical loads on its power grid. The Panama Canal (completed 1913–1914) used extensive telemetry systems to monitor locks and water levels.[11]
Wireless telemetry made early appearances in the
In the US and the USSR, the Messina system was quickly replaced with better systems; in both cases, based on pulse-position modulation (PPM).[12] Early Soviet missile and space telemetry systems which were developed in the late 1940s used either PPM (e.g., the Tral telemetry system developed by OKB-MEI) or
Applications
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Meteorology
Weather balloons use telemetry to transmit meteorological data since 1920.
Oil and gas industry
Telemetry is used to transmit drilling mechanics and formation evaluation information uphole, in real time, as a well is drilled. These services are known as Measurement while drilling and Logging while drilling. Information acquired thousands of feet below ground, while drilling, is sent through the drilling hole to the surface sensors and the demodulation software. The pressure wave (sana) is translated into useful information after DSP and noise filters. This information is used for Formation evaluation, Drilling Optimization, and Geosteering.
Motor racing
Telemetry is a key factor in modern motor racing, allowing race engineers to interpret data collected during a test or race and use it to properly tune the car for optimum performance. Systems used in series such as Formula One have become advanced to the point where the potential lap time of the car can be calculated, and this time is what the driver is expected to meet. Examples of measurements on a race car include accelerations (G forces) in three axes, temperature readings, wheel speed, and suspension displacement. In Formula One, driver input is also recorded so the team can assess driver performance and (in case of an accident) the FIA can determine or rule out driver error as a possible cause.
Later developments include two-way telemetry which allows engineers to update calibrations on the car in real time (even while it is out on the track). In Formula One, two-way telemetry surfaced in the early 1990s and consisted of a message display on the dashboard which the team could update. Its development continued until May 2001, when it was first allowed on the cars. By 2002, teams were able to change engine mapping and deactivate engine sensors from the pit while the car was on the track.[citation needed] For the 2003 season, the FIA banned two-way telemetry from Formula One;[14] however, the technology may be used in other types of racing or on road cars.
One way telemetry system has also been applied in R/C racing car to get information by car's sensors like: engine RPM, voltage, temperatures, throttle.
Transportation
In the transportation industry, telemetry provides meaningful information about a vehicle or driver's performance by collecting data from sensors within the vehicle. This is undertaken for various reasons ranging from staff compliance monitoring, insurance rating to predictive maintenance.
Telemetry is used to link traffic counter devices to data recorders to measure traffic flows and vehicle lengths and weights.[15]
Telemetry is used by the railway industry for measuring the health of
Agriculture
Most activities related to healthy crops and good yields depend on timely availability of weather and soil data. Therefore, wireless weather stations play a major role in disease prevention and precision irrigation. These stations transmit parameters necessary for decision-making to a base station:
Because local micro-climates can vary significantly, such data needs to come from within the crop. Monitoring stations usually transmit data back by terrestrial radio, although occasionally satellite systems are used. Solar power is often employed to make the station independent of the power grid.
Water management
Telemetry is important in
Defense, space and resource exploration
Telemetry is used in complex systems such as missiles, RPVs, spacecraft, oil rigs, and chemical plants since it allows the automatic monitoring, alerting, and record-keeping necessary for efficient and safe operation. Space agencies such as NASA, ISRO, the European Space Agency (ESA), and other agencies use telemetry and/or telecommand systems to collect data from spacecraft and satellites.
Telemetry is vital in the development of missiles, satellites and aircraft because the system might be destroyed during or after the test. Engineers need critical system parameters to analyze (and improve) the performance of the system. In the absence of telemetry, this data would often be unavailable.
Space science
Telemetry is used by crewed or uncrewed spacecraft for data transmission. Distances of more than 10 billion kilometres have been covered, e.g., by Voyager 1.
Rocketry
In rocketry, telemetry equipment forms an integral part of the
Flight testing
Today nearly every type of aircraft, missiles, or spacecraft carries a wireless telemetry system as it is tested.[21] Aeronautical mobile telemetry is used for the safety of the pilots and persons on the ground during flight tests. Telemetry from an on-board flight test instrumentation system is the primary source of real-time measurement and status information transmitted during the testing of crewed and uncrewed aircraft.[22]
Military intelligence
Intercepted telemetry was an important source of intelligence for the United States and UK when Soviet missiles were tested; for this purpose, the United States operated a listening post in Iran. Eventually, the Russians discovered the United States intelligence-gathering network and encrypted their missile-test telemetry signals. Telemetry was also a source for the Soviets, who operated listening ships in Cardigan Bay to eavesdrop on UK missile tests performed in the area[citation needed].
Energy monitoring
In factories, buildings and houses, energy consumption of systems such as
Resource distribution
Many resources need to be distributed over wide areas. Telemetry is useful in these cases, since it allows the logistics system to channel resources where they are needed, as well as provide security for those assets; principal examples of this are dry goods, fluids, and granular bulk solids.
Dry goods
Dry goods, such as packaged merchandise, may be tracked and remotely monitored, tracked and inventoried by
Fluids
Fluids stored in tanks are a principal object of constant commercial telemetry. This typically includes monitoring of tank farms in gasoline refineries and chemical plants—and distributed or remote tanks, which must be replenished when empty (as with gas station storage tanks, home heating oil tanks, or ag-chemical tanks at farms), or emptied when full (as with production from oil wells, accumulated waste products, and newly produced fluids).
Bulk solids
Telemetry of bulk solids is common for tracking and reporting the volume status and condition of
Medicine/healthcare
Telemetry is used for patients (
Systems are available in
A new and emerging application for telemetry is in the field of neurophysiology, or neurotelemetry.
Neurotelemetry is synonymous with real-time continuous video EEG monitoring and has application in the epilepsy monitoring unit, neuro ICU, pediatric ICU and newborn ICU. Due to the labor-intensive nature of continuous EEG monitoring NT is typically done in the larger academic teaching hospitals using in-house programs that include R.EEG Technologists, IT support staff, neurologist and neurophysiologist and monitoring support personnel.
Modern microprocessor speeds, software algorithms and video data compression allow hospitals to centrally record and monitor continuous digital EEGs of multiple critically ill patients simultaneously.
Neurotelemetry and continuous EEG monitoring provides dynamic information about brain function that permits early detection of changes in neurologic status, which is especially useful when the clinical examination is limited.
Fishery and wildlife research and management
Telemetry is used to study wildlife,
Retail
At a 2005 workshop in Las Vegas, a seminar noted the introduction of telemetry equipment which would allow vending machines to communicate sales and inventory data to a route truck or to a headquarters.[citation needed] This data could be used for a variety of purposes, such as eliminating the need for drivers to make a first trip to see which items needed to be restocked before delivering the inventory.
Retailers also use
Law enforcement
Telemetry hardware is useful for tracking persons and property in law enforcement. An
Energy providers
In some countries, telemetry is used to measure the amount of electrical energy consumed. The electricity meter communicates with a concentrator, and the latter sends the information through GPRS or GSM to the energy provider's server. Telemetry is also used for the remote monitoring of substations and their equipment. For data transmission, phase line carrier systems operating on frequencies between 30 and 400 kHz are sometimes used.
Falconry
In falconry, "telemetry" means a small radio transmitter carried by a bird of prey that will allow the bird's owner to track it when it is out of sight.
Testing
Telemetry is used in testing hostile environments which are dangerous to humans. Examples include munitions storage facilities, radioactive sites, volcanoes, deep sea, and outer space.
Communications
Telemetry is used in many battery operated wireless systems to inform monitoring personnel when the battery power is reaching a low point and the end item needs fresh batteries.
Mining
In the mining industry, telemetry serves two main purposes: the measurement of key parameters from mining equipment and the monitoring of safety practices.[35] The information provided by the collection and analysis of key parameters allows for root-cause identification of inefficient operations, unsafe practices and incorrect equipment usage for maximizing productivity and safety.[36] Further applications of the technology allow for sharing knowledge and best practices across the organization.[36]
Software
In software, telemetry is used to gather data on the use and performance of applications and application components, e.g. how often certain features are used, measurements of start-up time and processing time, hardware, application crashes, and general usage statistics and/or user behavior. In some cases, very detailed data is reported like individual window metrics, counts of used features, and individual function timings.
This kind of telemetry can be essential to software developers to receive data from a wide variety of endpoints that can't possibly all be tested in-house, as well as getting data on the popularity of certain features and whether they should be given priority or be considered for removal. Due to concerns about privacy since software telemetry can easily be used to profile users, telemetry in user software is often user choice, commonly presented as an opt-out feature (requiring explicit user action to disable it) or user choice during the software installation process.
International standards
As in other telecommunications fields, international standards exist for telemetry equipment and software. International standards producing bodies include Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) for space agencies, Inter-Range Instrumentation Group (IRIG) for missile ranges, and Telemetering Standards Coordination Committee (TSCC), an organisation of the International Foundation for Telemetering.
See also
- Data collection satellite
- Instrumentation
- Machine to Machine(M2M)
- MQ Telemetry Transport(MQTT)
- Portable telemetry
- Echelon)
- Remote monitoring and control
- Remote sensing
- Remote Terminal Unit(RTU)
- SBMV Protocol
- SCADA
- Telecommand
- Telematics
- Wireless sensor network
References
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- ^ Mary Bellis, "Telemetry"
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- ^ US patent 490012, Fernando J. Dibble, "Electric Telemeter Transmitter.", issued 1893-01-17 Archived 2022-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
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- ^ Kopp, page 497
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- ^ Mayo-Wells, "The Origins of Space Telemetry", Technology and Culture, 1963
- ^ Joachim & Muehlner, "Trends in Missile and Space Radio Telemetry" declassified Lockheed report
- ^ Molotov, E. L., Nazemnye Radiotekhnicheskie Sistemy Upravleniya Kosmicheskiymi Apparatami
- ^ "FIA makes massive changes to F1; several technological enhancements banned". Autoweek. January 14, 2003. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
- ISBN 978-0-478-10549-0. Archived(PDF) from the original on 31 January 2019. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
- ^ "New Measurement Train (NMT)". Networkrail.co.uk. Archived from the original on 19 February 2019. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ "Doctor Yellow Shinkansen: The Iconic Test Train". JapanRailPass. November 6, 2020. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
- ^ "Sperry Rail Service". Sperryrail.com.
- ^ "Sperry Rail Service". Sperryrail.com.
- ^ PAUL, DORSEY (8 May 2018). "WATERSHED SENSOR NETWORK NON-LINE-OF-SIGHT DATA TELEMETRY SYSTEM". ohiolink.edu. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1965.
- ^ ” ITU-R M.2286-0 Operational characteristics of aeronautical mobile telemetry systems”, International Telecommunication Union, Geneva 2014.
- ^ "RFID Technology," Archived 2019-04-23 at the Wayback Machine University of Arizona, retrieved April 8, 2019
- ^ White, Gareth R.T.; Georgina Gardiner; Guru Prabhakar; and Azley Abd Razak University of the West of England, UK), "A Comparison of Barcoding and RFID Technologies in Practice," Archived 2020-08-08 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Information, Information Technology, and Organizations, Volume 2 (2007), retrieved April 8, 2019
- ^ a b Rues, Gerald, MSEE, "Remote Tank Monitoring Can Save Time and Money," Archived 2019-03-07 at the Wayback Machine March, 2019, Tank Transport Archived 2019-03-07 at the Wayback Machine, magazine, retrieved March 6, 2019
- ^ Tank Sensors & Probes Archived 2019-03-18 at the Wayback Machine, Electronic Sensors, Inc., retrieved August 8, 2018
- ^ Henry Hopper, "A Dozen Ways to Measure Fluid Level and How They Work," Archived 2019-03-30 at the Wayback Machine December 1, 2018, Sensors Magazine, retrieved August 29, 2018
- ^ "Accurately Measuring Dry Bulk Solids Archived 2018-03-16 at the Wayback Machine," January 4, 2016, Powder-Bulk Solids magazine, retrieved April 8, 2019
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- ^ "Marine Wildlife Telemetry". Pinniped Ecology Applied Research Laboratory. Archived from the original on 15 February 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2012.
- ^ "What Is Telemetry?". Pinniped Ecology Applied Research Laboratory. Archived from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
- ^ Livezey, K.B. 1990. Toward the reduction of marking-induced abandonment of newborn ungulates. Wildlife Society Bulletin 18:193–203.
- ^ Telemetry in the Mining Industry. IETE Journal of Research. Volume 29, Issue 8, 1983. Retrieved August 20th 2015.
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