2,725 research outputs found
On the relaxed maximum-likelihood blind MIMO channel estimation for orthogonal space-time block codes
This paper concerns the maximum-likelihood channel estimation for MIMO
systems with orthogonal space-time block codes when the finite alphabet
constraint of the signal constellation is relaxed. We study the channel
coefficients estimation subspace generated by this method. We provide an
algebraic characterisation of this subspace which turns the optimization
problem into a purely algebraic one and more importantly, leads to several
interesting analytical proofs. We prove that with probability one, the
dimension of the estimation subspace for the channel coefficients is
deterministic and it decreases by increasing the number of receive antennas up
to a certain critical number of receive antennas, after which the dimension
remains constant. In fact, we show that beyond this critical number of receive
antennas, the estimation subspace for the channel coefficients is isometric to
a fixed deterministic invariant space which can be easily computed for every
specific OSTB code
Infinite Factorial Finite State Machine for Blind Multiuser Channel Estimation
New communication standards need to deal with machine-to-machine
communications, in which users may start or stop transmitting at any time in an
asynchronous manner. Thus, the number of users is an unknown and time-varying
parameter that needs to be accurately estimated in order to properly recover
the symbols transmitted by all users in the system. In this paper, we address
the problem of joint channel parameter and data estimation in a multiuser
communication channel in which the number of transmitters is not known. For
that purpose, we develop the infinite factorial finite state machine model, a
Bayesian nonparametric model based on the Markov Indian buffet that allows for
an unbounded number of transmitters with arbitrary channel length. We propose
an inference algorithm that makes use of slice sampling and particle Gibbs with
ancestor sampling. Our approach is fully blind as it does not require a prior
channel estimation step, prior knowledge of the number of transmitters, or any
signaling information. Our experimental results, loosely based on the LTE
random access channel, show that the proposed approach can effectively recover
the data-generating process for a wide range of scenarios, with varying number
of transmitters, number of receivers, constellation order, channel length, and
signal-to-noise ratio.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure
Feedforward data-aided phase noise estimation from a DCT basis expansion
This contribution deals with phase noise estimation from pilot symbols. The phase noise process is approximated by an expansion of discrete cosine transform (DCT) basis functions containing only a few terms. We propose a feedforward algorithm that estimates the DCT coefficients without requiring detailed knowledge about the phase noise statistics. We demonstrate that the resulting (linearized) mean-square phase estimation error consists of two contributions: a contribution from the additive noise, that equals the Cramer-Rao lower bound, and a noise independent contribution, that results front the phase noise modeling error. We investigate the effect of the symbol sequence length, the pilot symbol positions, the number of pilot symbols, and the number of estimated DCT coefficients it the estimation accuracy and on the corresponding bit error rate (PER). We propose a pilot symbol configuration allowing to estimate any number of DCT coefficients not exceeding the number of pilot Symbols, providing a considerable Performance improvement as compared to other pilot symbol configurations. For large block sizes, the DCT-based estimation algorithm substantially outperforms algorithms that estimate only the time-average or the linear trend of the carrier phase. Copyright (C) 2009 J. Bhatti and M. Moeneclaey
Passive radar on moving platforms exploiting DVB-T transmitters of opportunity
The work, effort, and research put into passive radar for stationary receivers have shown significant developments and progress in recent years. The next challenge is mounting a passive radar on moving platforms for the purpose of target detection and ground imaging, e.g. for covert border control. A passive radar on a moving platform has many advantages and offers many benefits, however there is also a considerable drawback that has limited its application so far. Due to the movement the clutter returns are spread in Doppler and may overlap moving targets, which are then difficult to detect. While this problem is common for an active radar as well, with a passive radar a further problem arises: It is impossible to control the exploited time-varying waveform emitted from a telecommunication transmitter. A conventional processing approach is ineffective as the time-varying waveform leads to residuals all over the processed data. Therefore a dedicated clutter cancellation method, e.g. the displaced phase centre antenna (DPCA) approach, does not have the ability to completely remove the clutter, so that target detection is considerably limited. The aim must be therefore to overcome this limitation by exploiting a processing technique, which is able to remove these residuals in order to cope with the clutter returns thus making target detection feasible. The findings of this research and thesis show that a reciprocal filtering based stage is able to provide a time-invariant impulse response similar to the transmissions of an active radar. Due to this benefit it is possible to achieve an overall complete clutter removal together with a dedicated DPCA stage, so that moving target detection is considerably improved, making it possible in the first place. Based on mathematical analysis and on simulations it is proven, that by exploiting this processing in principle an infinite clutter cancellation can be achieved. This result shows that the reciprocal filter is an essential processing stage. Applications on real data acquired from two different measurement campaigns prove these results. By the proposed approach, the limiting factor (i.e. the time-varying waveform) for target detection is negotiated, and in principle any clutter cancellation technique known from active radar can be applied. Therefore this analysis and the results provide a substantial contribution to the passive radar research community and enables it to address the next questions
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