How Bad Weather Affects Offshore Oil Field Data Transmission
Oil Field, ChinaTue Jan 07 2025
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Offshore oil fields face a big problem when the weather turns bad—microwave signals become unstable and noisy. To fix this, scientists used a method called Lagrange multiplier symplectic singular value mode decomposition to clean up the signal's noise. This was done in five steps: rebuilding the signal's space, making it similar geometrically, grouping it, averaging it diagonally, and reconstructing it adaptively.
But cleaning the signal isn't enough. Weak signals still need help. So, scientists boosted these signals to make them stronger. They then collected signals to understand delays better. Using an algorithm based on long-term and short-term memory, they predicted delays.
Like a thermostat boosting heat, a PID controller calculated how much to compensate for those delays. This helped keep data transmission real-time. Tests showed this method made data transmission better and kept communication on track, even in harsh weather.
https://localnews.ai/article/how-bad-weather-affects-offshore-oil-field-data-transmission-9dca8ea3
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