3,872 research outputs found
A Survey of Air-to-Ground Propagation Channel Modeling for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in the use of unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs), particularly for small UAVs, due to their affordable
prices, ease of availability, and ease of operability. Existing and future
applications of UAVs include remote surveillance and monitoring, relief
operations, package delivery, and communication backhaul infrastructure.
Additionally, UAVs are envisioned as an important component of 5G wireless
technology and beyond. The unique application scenarios for UAVs necessitate
accurate air-to-ground (AG) propagation channel models for designing and
evaluating UAV communication links for control/non-payload as well as payload
data transmissions. These AG propagation models have not been investigated in
detail when compared to terrestrial propagation models. In this paper, a
comprehensive survey is provided on available AG channel measurement campaigns,
large and small scale fading channel models, their limitations, and future
research directions for UAV communication scenarios
3-D Statistical Channel Model for Millimeter-Wave Outdoor Mobile Broadband Communications
This paper presents an omnidirectional spatial and temporal 3-dimensional
statistical channel model for 28 GHz dense urban non-line of sight
environments. The channel model is developed from 28 GHz ultrawideband
propagation measurements obtained with a 400 megachips per second broadband
sliding correlator channel sounder and highly directional, steerable horn
antennas in New York City. A 3GPP-like statistical channel model that is easy
to implement in software or hardware is developed from measured power delay
profiles and a synthesized method for providing absolute propagation delays
recovered from 3-D ray-tracing, as well as measured angle of departure and
angle of arrival power spectra. The extracted statistics are used to implement
a MATLAB-based statistical simulator that generates 3-D millimeter-wave
temporal and spatial channel coefficients that reproduce realistic impulse
responses of measured urban channels. The methods and model presented here can
be used for millimeter-wave system-wide simulations, and air interface design
and capacity analyses.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, ICC 2015 (London, UK, to appear
60 GHz Blockage Study Using Phased Arrays
The millimeter wave (mmWave) frequencies offer the potential for enormous
capacity wireless links. However, designing robust communication systems at
these frequencies requires that we understand the channel dynamics over both
time and space: mmWave signals are extremely vulnerable to blocking and the
channel can thus rapidly appear and disappear with small movement of obstacles
and reflectors. In rich scattering environments, different paths may experience
different blocking trajectories and understanding these multi-path blocking
dynamics is essential for developing and assessing beamforming and
beam-tracking algorithms. This paper presents the design and experimental
results of a novel measurement system which uses phased arrays to perform
mmWave dynamic channel measurements. Specifically, human blockage and its
effects across multiple paths are investigated with only several microseconds
between successive measurements. From these measurements we develop a modeling
technique which uses low-rank tensor factorization to separate the available
paths so that their joint statistics can be understood.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 51st Asilomar Conference on
Signals, Systems, and Computers, 201
- …