The Digital Twin Consortium (DTC) has announced a new working group that seeks to address the application and adoption of digital twins in the telecommunications market.
The group plans to focus on telecommunications market challenges using digital twins, including for platform development for emerging technologies and enabling smart cities.
Connecting to Essential Services
As the world becomes increasingly connected and reliant on technology, telecommunication providers will continue to play a crucial role in facilitating communication and enabling access to essential services.
However, according to management consulting firm Analysys Masonโs research predictions for the telecoms, media and technology sectors in 2023, the telecommunications sector is dealing with rising inflation, particularly from the energy sector.
Moreover, market challenges are already hampering telecom providers from delivering services, opening new revenue streams, and returning value to shareholders.
โCurrent networking infrastructures often face fragmentation issues that make it difficult to support new network rollouts, expand capacity, and introduce new features that can help address societal challenges,โ said Dan Isaacs, general manager and CTO of the Digital Twin Consortium.
โDigital twins provide a 360-degree view of network performance and usage patterns, enabling improved analysis, optimal coverage, accurate predictive analytics, and effective management approaches.โ
According to DTC, by using a virtual model of an entire area or process, management can visualise and test out different initiatives, making data-driven decisions based on billions of network performance data points.
These initiatives can then be evaluated through more precise enterprise-level analytics and location intelligence, to help identify optimal implementation scenarios.
Digital twins can simulate the propagation of radio waves in various environments and identify the optimal placement of antennas and repeaters for maximum coverage and signal strength. A digital twin of a satellite communications system or cellular tower can monitor its performance in real-time and identify potential issues or faults before they become critical.
By using digital twins to optimise satellite communications systems and overall constellation performance, companies can provide more reliable and consistent service to their customers, especially in remote or difficult-to-reach areas.
The DTC Telecommunications Working Group plans to focus on telecommunications market challenges using digital twins, including:
- Platform development for emerging technologies
- Enabling smart cityโs economic and societal structure improvements
- Sustainable energy reuse
- Bridging the gap to non-IP-based networking
- Creating a faster path to information/intent-based networking
- Providing transparent 360-cybersecurity
- Creating novel design paradigms, including AI and machine learning, to help address societal challenges and more.
The new working group will define and identify digital twin applications for the telecommunications industry. It will explore implementation scenarios utilizing extended reality (XR) capabilities and advanced simulation perspectives, ensuring a secure, scalable solution for enterprise-level XR data visualisation for geospatial analytics and location intelligence.
The new telecom group will also investigate use cases and reference implementations for intelligent infrastructure, smart cities, and beyond. These include network design optimisation, operations, and capacity planning.
Digital Twin Consortium aims to coalesce industry, government, and academia to drive consistency in vocabulary, architecture, security, and interoperability of digital twin technology.
It advances digital twin technology in many industries, from aerospace to natural resources. DTC is a programme of Object Management Group.