342 research outputs found

    A Novel Chirp Slope Keying Modulation Scheme for Underwater Communication

    Get PDF
    A digital modulation method using Chirp-Slope Keying (CSK) is developed for coherent underwater acoustic communications. Effective signal detection is a critical stage in the implementation of any communications system; we will see that CSK solves some significant challenges to reliable detection. This thesis is primarily based on analyzing the effectiveness of CSK through simulations using Matlab\u27s Simulink for underwater communications. The procedure begins with modulating a chirp\u27s slope by random binary data with a linear-down-slope chirp representing a 0, and a linear-up-slope chirp representing a 1. Each received symbol is demodulated by multiplying it with the exact linear-up-slope chirp and then integrating over a whole period (i.e., integrate and dump). This slope-detection technique reduces the need for the extensive recognition of the magnitude and/or the frequencies of the signal. Simulations demonstrate that CSK offers sturdy performance in the modeled ocean environment, even at very low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). CSK is first tested using the fundamental communication channel, Additive White Gaussian Noise (AWGN) channel. Simulation results show excellent BER vs. SNR performance, implying CSK is a promising method. Further extensive analysis and simulations are performed to evaluate the quality of CSK in more realistic channels including Rayleigh amplitude fading channel and multipath

    Information-Theoretic Analysis of Underwater Acoustic OFDM Systems in Highly Dispersive Channels

    Get PDF

    Underwater acoustic communications

    Get PDF
    The underwater acoustic medium poses unique challenges to the design of robust, high throughput digital communications. The aim of this work is to identify modulation and receiver processing techniques to enable the reliable transfer of data at high rate, at range between two, potentially mobile parties using acoustics. More generally, this work seeks to investigate techniques to effectively communicate between two or more parties over a wide range of channel conditions where data rate is a key but not always the absolute performance requirement. Understanding the intrinsic ocean mechanisms that influence signal coherence, the relationship between signal coherence and optimum signal design, and the development of robust modulation and receiver processing techniques are the main areas of study within this work. New and established signal design, modulation, synchronisation, equalisation and spatial processing techniques are investigated. Several new, innovative techniques are presented which seek to improve the robustness of ‘classical’ solutions to the underwater acoustic communications problem. The performance of these techniques to mitigate the severe temporal dispersion of the underwater channel and its unique temporal variability are assessed. A candidate modulation, synchronisation and equalisation architecture is proposed based on a spatial-temporal adaptive signal processing (STAP) receiver. Comprehensive simulation results are presented to demonstrate the performance of the candidate receiver to time selective, frequency selective and spatially selective channel behaviour. Several innovative techniques are presented which maximise system performance over a wider range of operational and environmental conditions. Field trials results are presented based on system evaluation over a wide range of geographically distinct environments demonstrating system performance over a diverse range of ocean bathymetry, topography and background noise conditions. A real time implementation of the system is reported and field trials results presented demonstrating the capability of the system to support a wide range of data formats including video at useful frame rates. Within this work, several novel techniques have been developed which have extended the state of the art in high data rate underwater communications:- • Robust, high fidelity open loop synchronisation techniques capable of operating at marginal signal-to-noise ratios over a wide range of severely time spread environments. These high probability of synchronisation, low probability of false alarm techniques, provide the means for ‘burst’ open loop synchronisation in time, Doppler and space (bearing). The techniques have been demonstrated in communication and position fixing/navigation systems to provide repeatable range accuracy’s to centimetric order. • Novel closed loop synchronisation compensation for STAP receiver architectures. Specifically, this work has demonstrated the performance benefits of including both delay lock loop (DLL) and phase lock loop (PLL) support for acoustic adaptive receivers to offload tracking effort from the fractional feedforward equaliser section. It has been shown that the addition of a DLL/PLL outperforms the PLL only case for Doppler errors exceeding a few fractions of a knot. • Recycling of training data has been demonstrated as a potentially useful means to improve equaliser convergence in difficult acoustic channels. With suitable processing power, training data recycling introduces no additional transmission time overhead, which may be a limiting factor in battery powered applications. • Forward and time reverse decoding of packet data has been demonstrated as an effective means to overcome some non-minimum phase channel conditions. It has also been shown that there may be further benefits in terms of improved bit error performance, by exploiting concurrent forward and backward symbol data under modest channel conditions. • Several wideband techniques have been developed and demonstrated to be effective at resolving and coherently tracking difficult doubly spread acoustic channels. In particular, wideband spread spectrum techniques have been shown to be effective at resolving acoustic multipath, and with the aid of independent delay lock loops, track individual path arrivals. Techniques have been developed which can effect coherent or non-coherent recombination of these paths with a view to improving the robustness of an acoustic link operating at very low signal-to-noise levels. • Demonstrated throughputs of up to 41kbps in a difficult, tropical environment, featuring significant biological noise levels for mobile platforms at range up to 1.5km. • Demonstrated throughputs of between 300bps and 1600bps in a shallow, reverberant environment, at a range up to 21km at LF. • Implemented and demonstrated all algorithms in real time systems

    Development of a dynamic underwater acoustic communication channel simulator with configurable sea surface parameters to explore time-varying signal distortion

    Get PDF
    A wide-band phase-coherent multi-path underwater acoustic channel simulation is developed using an approximate quantitative model of the acoustic wave response to a time-varying three-dimensional rough surface. It has been demonstrated over transmission ranges from 100 m to 8 km by experimental channel probing and comparable synthetic replication of the channel probing through the simulated channel, that the simulation is capable of reproducing fine-time-scale Doppler and delay distortions consistent with those generated in real shallow channels

    Effects of errorless learning on the acquisition of velopharyngeal movement control

    Get PDF
    Session 1pSC - Speech Communication: Cross-Linguistic Studies of Speech Sound Learning of the Languages of Hong Kong (Poster Session)The implicit motor learning literature suggests a benefit for learning if errors are minimized during practice. This study investigated whether the same principle holds for learning velopharyngeal movement control. Normal speaking participants learned to produce hypernasal speech in either an errorless learning condition (in which the possibility for errors was limited) or an errorful learning condition (in which the possibility for errors was not limited). Nasality level of the participants’ speech was measured by nasometer and reflected by nasalance scores (in %). Errorless learners practiced producing hypernasal speech with a threshold nasalance score of 10% at the beginning, which gradually increased to a threshold of 50% at the end. The same set of threshold targets were presented to errorful learners but in a reversed order. Errors were defined by the proportion of speech with a nasalance score below the threshold. The results showed that, relative to errorful learners, errorless learners displayed fewer errors (50.7% vs. 17.7%) and a higher mean nasalance score (31.3% vs. 46.7%) during the acquisition phase. Furthermore, errorless learners outperformed errorful learners in both retention and novel transfer tests. Acknowledgment: Supported by The University of Hong Kong Strategic Research Theme for Sciences of Learning © 2012 Acoustical Society of Americapublished_or_final_versio

    Autonomous adaptive acoustic relay positioning

    Get PDF
    Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mechanical Engineering, 2013.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (pages 75-79).We consider the problem of maximizing underwater acoustic data transmission by adaptively positioning an autonomous mobile relay so as to learn and exploit spatial variations in channel performance. The acoustic channel is the main practical method of underwater wireless communication and improving channel throughput and reliability is key to improving the capabilities of underwater vehicles. Predicting the performance of the acoustic channel in the shallow-water environment is challenging and usually requires extensive modeling of the environment. However, a mobile relay can learn about the unknown channel as it transmits. The relay must balance searching unknown sites to gain more information, which may pay off in the future, and exploiting already-visited sites for immediate reward. This is a classic exploration vs. exploitation problem that is well-described by a multi-armed bandit formulation with an elegant solution in the form of Gittins indices. For an autonomous ocean vehicle traveling between distant waypoints, however, switching costs are significant. The multi-armed bandit with switching costs has no optimal index policy, so we have developed an adaptation of the Gittins index rule with limited policy enumeration and asymptotic performance bounds. We describe extensive shallow-water field experiments conducted in the Charles River (Boston, MA) with autonomous surface vehicles and acoustic modems, and use the field data to assess performance of the MAB decision policies and comparable heuristics. We find the switching-costs-aware algorithm offers superior real-time performance in decision-making and efficient learning of the unknown field.by Mei Yi Cheung.S.M

    Environmental model-based time-reversal underwater communications

    Get PDF
    Advances in underwater acoustic communications require the development of methods to accurately compensate channels that are prone to severe double spreading of time-varying multipath propagation, fading and signal phase variations. Assuming the environmental information as a key issue, this work aims to improve communications performance of single-input-multiple-output transmission systems in such channels through the enhancement of their estimates used for equalization. The acoustic propagation physical parameters of the environment between the source and the receivers are considered in the process. The approach is to mitigate noise e ects in channel identi cation for Passive Time-Reversal (PTR), which is a low complexity probe-based refocusing technique to reduce time spreading and inter-symbol interference. The method Environmental-based PTR (EPTR) is proposed that, inspired by matched eld inversion, inserts physics of acoustic propagation in the channel compensation procedure through ray trace modeling and environmental focalization processing. The focalization is the process of tweaking the environmental parameters to obtain a noise-free numerical model generated channel response that best matches the observed data. The EPTR performance is tested and compared to the pulse-compressed PTR and to the regularized `1-norm PTR. The former is based on classical `2-norm channel estimation and the latter, inspired by compressive sensing, uses weighted `1-norm into the `2-norm estimation problem to obtain improved estimates of sparse channels. Successful experimental results were obtained with the proposed method for signals containing image messages transmitted at 4 kbit/s from a source to a 16-hydrophones vertical array at 890 m range during the UAN'11 experiment conducted o the coast of Trondheim (Norway). The scienti c contributions of this work are (i) the understanding of the process of employing physical modeling and environmental focalization to equalize and retrieve received messages in underwater acoustic communications, thus exploiting the sensitivity of environmental parameters in order to adapt a communications system to the scenario where it is used; and (ii) the presentation of a new PTR-based method that focuses environmental parameters to model suitable noise-free channel responses for equalization and whose real data results were successful for a set of coherent signals collected at sea. The proposed method is a step forward to a better understanding on how to insert physical knowledge of the environment for equalization in digital underwater acoustic communications
    • …
    corecore