sensors.To address this challenge, we propose a new mean-field flight resource allocation optimization to minimize the AoI of sensory data.
Unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-assisted sensor networks (UASNets), which play a crucial role in creating new opportunities, are experiencing significant growth in civil applications worldwide. UASNets improve disaster management through timely surveillance and advance precision agriculture with detailed crop monitoring, thereby significantly transforming the commercial economy. UASNets revolutionize the commercial sector by offering greater efficiency, safety, and cost-effectiveness, highlighting their transformative impact. A fundamental aspect of these new capabilities and changes is the collection of data from rugged and remote areas. Due to their excellent mobility and maneuverability, UAVs are employed to collect data from ground sensors in harsh environments, such as natural disaster monitoring, border surveillance, and emergency response monitoring. One major challenge in these scenarios is that the movements of UAVs affect channel conditions and result in packet loss. Fast movements of UAVs lead to poor channel conditions and rapid signal degradation, resulting in packet loss. On the other hand, slow mobility of a UAV can cause buffer overflows of the ground sensors, as newly arrived data is not promptly collected by the UAV. Our proposal to address this challenge is to minimize packet loss by jointly optimizing the velocity controls and data collection schedules of multiple UAVs.Furthermore, in UASNets, swift movements of UAVs result in poor channel conditions and fast signal attenuation, leading to an extended age of information (AoI). In contrast, slow movements of UAVs prolong flight time, thereby extending the AoI of ground