13 research outputs found

    Communication platform for inter-satellite links in distributed satellite systems

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    The design of an asynchronous BCJR/MAP convolutional channel decoder.

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    The digital design alternative to the everyday synchronous circuit design paradigm is the asynchronous model. Asynchronous circuits are also known as handshaking circuits and they may prove to be a feasible design alternative in the modern digital Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) design environment. Asynchronous circuits and systems offer the possibility of lower system power requirements, reduced noise, elimination of clock skew and many other benefits. Channel coding is a useful means of eliminating erroneous transmission due to the communication channel\u27s physical limits. Convolutional coding has come to the forefront of channel coding discussions due to the usefulness of turbo codes. The niche market for turbo codes have typically been in satellite communication. The usefulness of turbo codes are now expanding into the next generation of handheld communication products. It is probable that the turbo coding scheme will reside in the next cellular phone one purchases [1]. Turbo coding uses two BCJR decoders in its implementation. The BCJR decoding algorithm was named after its creators Bahl, Cocke, Jelinek, and Raviv (BCJR). The BCJR algorithm is sometimes known as a Maximum Priori Posteriori (MAP) algorithm. This means a very large part of the turbo coding research will encompass the BCJR/MAP decoder and its optimization for size, power and performance. An investigation into the design of a BCJR/MAP convolutional channel decoder will be introduced. This will encompass the use and synthesis of an asynchronous Hardware Definition Language (HDL) called Balsa. The design will be carried through to the gate implementation level. Proper gate level analysis will identify the key metrics that will determine the feasibility of an asynchronous design of that of the everyday clocked paradigm.* *This dissertation is a compound document (contains both a paper copy and a CD as part of the dissertation).Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Paper copy at Leddy Library: Theses & Major Papers - Basement, West Bldg. / Call Number: Thesis2004 .P47. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 43-05, page: 1782. Adviser: Kemal Tepe. Thesis (M.A.Sc.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 2005

    2.5D Chiplet Architecture for Embedded Processing of High Velocity Streaming Data

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    This dissertation presents an energy efficient 2.5D chiplet-based architecture for real-time probabilistic processing of high-velocity sensor data, from an autonomous real-time ubiquitous surveillance imaging system. This work addresses problems at all levels of description. At the lowest physical level, new standard cell libraries have been developed for ultra-low voltage CMOS synthesis, as well as custom SRAM memory blocks, and mixed-signal physical true random number generators based on the perturbation of Sigma-Delta structures using random telegraph noise (RTN) in single transistor devices. At the chip level architecture, an innovative compact buffer-less switched circuit mesh network on chip (NoC) capable of reaching very high throughput (1.6Tbps), finite packet delay delivery, free from packet dropping, and free from dead-locks and live-locks, was designed for this chiplet-based solution. Additionally, a second NoC connecting processors in the network, was implemented based on token-rings, allowing access to external DDR memory. Furthermore, a new clock tree distribution network, and a wide bandwidth DRAM physical interface have been designed to address the data flow requirements within and across chiplets. At the algorithm and representation levels, the Online Change Point Detection (CPD) algorithm has been implemented for on-line learning of background-foreground segmentation. Instead of using traditional binary representation of numbers, this architecture relies on unconventional processing of signals using a bio-inspired (spike-based) unary representation of numbers, where these numbers are represented in a stochastic stream of Bernoulli random variables. By using this representation, probabilistic algorithms can be executed in a native architecture with precision on demand, where if more accuracy is required, more computational time and power can be allocated. The SoC chiplet architecture has been extensively simulated and validated using state of the art CAD methodology, and has been submitted to fabrication in a dedicated 55nm GF CMOS technology wafer run. Experimental results from fabricated test chips in the same technology are also presented

    Research and Technology Report. Goddard Space Flight Center

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    This issue of Goddard Space Flight Center's annual report highlights the importance of mission operations and data systems covering mission planning and operations; TDRSS, positioning systems, and orbit determination; ground system and networks, hardware and software; data processing and analysis; and World Wide Web use. The report also includes flight projects, space sciences, Earth system science, and engineering and materials

    Energy Efficient VLSI Circuits for MIMO-WLAN

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    Mobile communication - anytime, anywhere access to data and communication services - has been continuously increasing since the operation of the first wireless communication link by Guglielmo Marconi. The demand for higher data rates, despite the limited bandwidth, led to the development of multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication which is often combined with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM). Together, these two techniques achieve a high bandwidth efficiency. Unfortunately, techniques such as MIMO-OFDM significantly increase the signal processing complexity of transceivers. While fast improvements in the integrated circuit (IC) technology enabled to implement more signal processing complexity per chip, large efforts had and have to be done for novel algorithms as well as for efficient very large scaled integration (VLSI) architectures in order to meet today's and tomorrow's requirements for mobile wireless communication systems. In this thesis, we will present architectures and VLSI implementations of complete physical (PHY) layer application specific integrated circuits (ASICs) under the constraints imposed by an industrial wireless communication standard. Contrary to many other publications, we do not elaborate individual components of a MIMO-OFDM communication system stand-alone, but in the context of the complete PHY layer ASIC. We will investigate the performance of several MIMO detectors and the corresponding preprocessing circuits, being integrated into the entire PHY layer ASIC, in terms of achievable error-rate, power consumption, and area requirement. Finally, we will assemble the results from the proposed PHY layer implementations in order to enhance the energy efficiency of a transceiver. To this end, we propose a cross-layer optimization of PHY layer and medium access control (MAC) layer

    Research & Technology Report Goddard Space Flight Center

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    The main theme of this edition of the annual Research and Technology Report is Mission Operations and Data Systems. Shifting from centralized to distributed mission operations, and from human interactive operations to highly automated operations is reported. The following aspects are addressed: Mission planning and operations; TDRSS, Positioning Systems, and orbit determination; hardware and software associated with Ground System and Networks; data processing and analysis; and World Wide Web. Flight projects are described along with the achievements in space sciences and earth sciences. Spacecraft subsystems, cryogenic developments, and new tools and capabilities are also discussed

    Ant colony optimization on runtime reconfigurable architectures

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    Proceedings of the Third International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC 1993)

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    Satellite-based mobile communications systems provide voice and data communications to users over a vast geographic area. The users may communicate via mobile or hand-held terminals, which may also provide access to terrestrial cellular communications services. While the first and second International Mobile Satellite Conferences (IMSC) mostly concentrated on technical advances, this Third IMSC also focuses on the increasing worldwide commercial activities in Mobile Satellite Services. Because of the large service areas provided by such systems, it is important to consider political and regulatory issues in addition to technical and user requirements issues. Topics covered include: the direct broadcast of audio programming from satellites; spacecraft technology; regulatory and policy considerations; advanced system concepts and analysis; propagation; and user requirements and applications

    MAC layer assisted localization in wireless environments with multiple sensors and multiple emitters

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    Extreme emitter density (EED) RF environments, defined as 10k-100k emitters within a footprint of less than 1 km squared, are becoming increasingly common with the proliferation of personal devices containing myriad communication standards (e.g. WLAN, Bluetooth, 4G, etc). Attendees at concerts, sporting events, and other such large-scale events desire to be connected at all times, creating tremendous spectrum management challenges, especially in unlicensed frequencies such as 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, or 900 MHz Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) bands. In licensed bands, there are often critical communication systems such as two-way radios for emergency personnel which must be free from interference. Identification and localization of a non-conforming or interfering Emitter of Interest (EoI) is important for these critical systems. In this dissertation, research is conducted to improve localization for these EED RF environments by exploiting side information available at the Medium Access Control (MAC) layer. The primary contributions of this research are: (1) A testbed in Bobby Dodd football stadium consisting of three spatially distributed, time-synchronized RF Sensor Nodes (RFSN) collecting and archiving complex baseband samples for algorithm development and validation. (2) A modeling framework and analytical results on the benefits of exploiting the structure of the MAC layer for associating physical layer measurements, such as Time Difference of Arrivals (TDoA), to emitters. (3) A three stage localization algorithm exploiting time between packets and a constrained geometry to shrink the error ellipse of the emitter position estimate. The results are expected to improve localization accuracy in wireless environments when multiple sensors observe multiple emitters using a known communications protocol within a constrained geometry.Ph.D

    Network-on-Chip

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    Addresses the Challenges Associated with System-on-Chip Integration Network-on-Chip: The Next Generation of System-on-Chip Integration examines the current issues restricting chip-on-chip communication efficiency, and explores Network-on-chip (NoC), a promising alternative that equips designers with the capability to produce a scalable, reusable, and high-performance communication backbone by allowing for the integration of a large number of cores on a single system-on-chip (SoC). This book provides a basic overview of topics associated with NoC-based design: communication infrastructure design, communication methodology, evaluation framework, and mapping of applications onto NoC. It details the design and evaluation of different proposed NoC structures, low-power techniques, signal integrity and reliability issues, application mapping, testing, and future trends. Utilizing examples of chips that have been implemented in industry and academia, this text presents the full architectural design of components verified through implementation in industrial CAD tools. It describes NoC research and developments, incorporates theoretical proofs strengthening the analysis procedures, and includes algorithms used in NoC design and synthesis. In addition, it considers other upcoming NoC issues, such as low-power NoC design, signal integrity issues, NoC testing, reconfiguration, synthesis, and 3-D NoC design. This text comprises 12 chapters and covers: The evolution of NoC from SoC—its research and developmental challenges NoC protocols, elaborating flow control, available network topologies, routing mechanisms, fault tolerance, quality-of-service support, and the design of network interfaces The router design strategies followed in NoCs The evaluation mechanism of NoC architectures The application mapping strategies followed in NoCs Low-power design techniques specifically followed in NoCs The signal integrity and reliability issues of NoC The details of NoC testing strategies reported so far The problem of synthesizing application-specific NoCs Reconfigurable NoC design issues Direction of future research and development in the field of NoC Network-on-Chip: The Next Generation of System-on-Chip Integration covers the basic topics, technology, and future trends relevant to NoC-based design, and can be used by engineers, students, and researchers and other industry professionals interested in computer architecture, embedded systems, and parallel/distributed systems
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