Aerial-Aided Multiaccess Edge Computing: Dynamic and Joint Optimization of Task and Service Placement and Routing in Multilayer Networks

5G's feature of ubiquity in network coverage is expected to be extended to the computing domain in 6G. To accomplish ubiquity in communication and computation, integration of satellite, aerial and terrestrial networks is foreseen. In particular, the rising amount of applications such as In-Flig...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on aerospace and electronic systems 2023-06, Vol.59 (3), p.2593-2607
Hauptverfasser: von Mankowski, Jörg, Durmaz, Emre, Papa, Arled, Vijayaraghavan, Hansini, Kellerer, Wolfgang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:5G's feature of ubiquity in network coverage is expected to be extended to the computing domain in 6G. To accomplish ubiquity in communication and computation, integration of satellite, aerial and terrestrial networks is foreseen. In particular, the rising amount of applications such as In-Flight Entertainment and Connectivity Services (IFECS) and Software Defined Networking-enabled satellites renders network management more challenging. Moreover, the stringent Quality of Service (QoS) demands of these applications require edge computing. Network performance can be boosted by considering components of the aerial network, as potential Multi-Access Edge Computing (MEC) nodes. Thus, to cater to the QoS-critical applications, we propose an Aerial-Aided Multi-Access Edge Computing (AA-MEC) architecture that provides a framework for optimal management of computing resources and internet-based services in the sky. Furthermore, we formulate optimization problems to minimize the network latency for the two use cases of providing IFECS to aircrafts and services for offloading AI/ML tasks from satellites. Due to the dynamicity of satellite and aerial networks, we propose a re-configurable optimization. For this transforming network, we continuously identify the optimal MEC node for each application and the optimal path to the destination MEC node. In summary, our results demonstrate, that using AA-MEC improves network latency performance by 10.43% compared to the traditional approach of using only terrestrial MEC nodes, for latency-critical applications such as online gaming. Furthermore, while comparing our proposed dynamic approach with a static one, we record a minimum of 6.7% decrease in flow latency for IFECS and 56.03% decrease for computation offloading.
ISSN:0018-9251
1557-9603
DOI:10.1109/TAES.2022.3217430