Area and street lighting is one of the most important elements of a city's infrastructure. For such extensive lighting installations it is desirable to know the locations of individual luminaires for maintenance and other purposes involving planning and billing.
In many instances, maintenance and installation crews installing luminaires record the luminaire locations by their GPS coordinates. The GPS coordinates are often provided by GPS receivers carried by the installation crews as part of a crew's personal data assistant.
It occasionally happens that luminaires are moved and their new location coordinates are not recorded. This introduces bookkeeping errors and adds to the overhead of maintaining the city's lighting infrastructure. It may also result in incorrectly locating and therefore misinterpreting data provided by non-illumination functions that are associated with, and physically proximate to, the luminaire.
A need therefore exists for a luminaire associate that will also provide the luminaire's true position and the location of associated functions regardless of a relocation of the luminaire and its associate.
A luminaire installed in an area or street lighting system typically comprises a lamp, a luminaire associate that supplies power to the lamp at appropriate times and may perform other functions, and a post supporting the lamp and luminaire associate.
An acceleration event is declared and reported if (1) the magnitude of the measured acceleration exceeds a prescribed threshold or (2) the spectrum of the measured acceleration has one or more spectral components that exceed one or more prescribed thresholds or (3) in the case of a multiple axis accelerometer, the previous case (1) or (2) wherein the case applies to a particular accelerometer axis.
The technical advantages to incorporating the combination of a GPS receiver and accelerometer into the luminaire associate 120 are manifold. Not only can the luminaire be accurately located following its relocation, any accelerometer data will be associated with the luminaire's accurate geographical location. The accelerometer data can be used for very many purposes including, but not limited to: (1) monitoring wind speeds or detection of winds exceeding certain limits and (2) detection of a vehicle impacting the luminaire support pole and (3) estimating traffic loading on adjacent streets through analysis of coupled vibration and (4) earthquake alerting and (5) tornado tracking.
Not illustrated but optionally included in the luminaire associate 120 is a communication device that allows the luminaire associate to communicate with at least one of the lighting utility's data centers, vehicles, maintenance worker crew, and data centers belonging to other infrastructures such as an electric power utility. Also not illustrated but optionally included in the luminaire associate 120 is a data recorder that records compressed or uncompressed accelerometer data and the time associated with the compressed or uncompressed accelerometer data. Such recorded data may be of value to the lighting utility for such actions as warranty claims, insurance actions, and maintenance and replacement or upgrade scheduling.
Another embodiment is illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | |
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61907090 | Nov 2013 | US | |
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