665 research outputs found

    Cloud-aided wireless systems: communications and radar applications

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    This dissertation focuses on cloud-assisted radio technologies for communication, including mobile cloud computing and Cloud Radio Access Network (C-RAN), and for radar systems. This dissertation first concentrates on cloud-aided communications. Mobile cloud computing, which allows mobile users to run computationally heavy applications on battery limited devices, such as cell phones, is considered initially. Mobile cloud computing enables the offloading of computation-intensive applications from a mobile device to a cloud processor via a wireless interface. The interplay between offloading decisions at the application layer and physical-layer parameters, which determine the energy and latency associated with the mobile-cloud communication, motivates the inter-layer optimization of fine-grained task offloading across both layers. This problem is modeled by using application call graphs, and the joint optimization of application-layer and physical-layer parameters is carried out via a message passing algorithm by minimizing the total energy expenditure of the mobile user. The concept of cloud radio is also being considered for the development of two cellular architectures known as Distributed RAN (D-RAN) and C-RAN, whereby the baseband processing of base stations is carried out in a remote Baseband Processing Unit (BBU). These architectures can reduce the capital and operating expenses of dense deployments at the cost of increasing the communication latency. The effect of this latency, which is due to the fronthaul transmission between the Remote Radio Head (RRH) and the BBU, is then studied for implementation of Hybrid Automatic Repeat Request (HARQ) protocols. Specifically, two novel solutions are proposed, which are based on the control-data separation architecture. The trade-offs involving resources such as the number of transmitting and receiving antennas, transmission power and the blocklength of the transmitted codeword, and the performance of the proposed solutions is investigated in analysis and numerical results. The detection of a target in radar systems requires processing of the signal that is received by the sensors. Similar to cloud radio access networks in communications, this processing of the signals can be carried out in a remote Fusion Center (FC) that is connected to all sensors via limited-capacity fronthaul links. The last part of this dissertation is dedicated to exploring the application of cloud radio to radar systems. In particular, the problem of maximizing the detection performance at the FC jointly over the code vector used by the transmitting antenna and over the statistics of the noise introduced by quantization at the sensors for fronthaul transmission is investigated by adopting the information-theoretic criterion of the Bhattacharyya distance and information-theoretic bounds on the quantization rate

    Radar networks: A review of features and challenges

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    Networks of multiple radars are typically used for improving the coverage and tracking accuracy. Recently, such networks have facilitated deployment of commercial radars for civilian applications such as healthcare, gesture recognition, home security, and autonomous automobiles. They exploit advanced signal processing techniques together with efficient data fusion methods in order to yield high performance of event detection and tracking. This paper reviews outstanding features of radar networks, their challenges, and their state-of-the-art solutions from the perspective of signal processing. Each discussed subject can be evolved as a hot research topic.Comment: To appear soon in Information Fusio

    Design of large polyphase filters in the Quadratic Residue Number System

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    Temperature aware power optimization for multicore floating-point units

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    Compressive Sensing in Communication Systems

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    One-Bit Algorithm Considerations for Sparse PMCW Radar

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    Phase Modulated Continuous Wave (PMCW) radar an emerging technology for autonomous cars. It is more flexible than the current frequency modulated systems, offering better detection resolution, interference mitigation, and future development opportunities. The issue preventing PMCW adoption is the need for high sample-rate analog to digital converters (ADCs). Due to device limits, a large increase in cost and power consumption occurs for every added resolution bit for a given sampling rate. This thesis explores radar detection techniques for few-bit and 1-bit ADC measurements. 1-bit quantization typically results in poor amplitude estimation, which can limit detections if the target signals are weak. Time Varying quantization Thresholds (TVTs) are a way to preserve that amplitude information. An existing few-bit Fast Iterative Shrinkage Thresholding Algorithm (FISTA) was adapted to use 1-bit TVT quantization. Three test scenarios compared the original FISTA using 1 and 2-bit quantization to the TVT approach. Tests included widely spaced targets, adjacent targets, and high dynamic range targets. Performance metrics included normalized mean squared error (NMSE) of target amplitude estimation and Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves for detection accuracy. Results showed the TVT implementation operated over the widest range of SNR values, had the lowest amplitude estimate NMSE at high SNR, and comparable NMSE with 2-bit FISTA at low SNR. There was an 84−93%84-93\% reduction in NMSE compared to 1-bit FISTA without TVTs. Few-bit FISTA had the best detection rates at specific SNR values, but was more sensitive to noise. AUC values averaged across the full SNR range for TVT FISTA were the most robust, measuring 13−46%13-46\% higher than 1-bit FISTA and 48−74%48-74\% higher than 2-bit FISTA. Advisor: Andrew Harm
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