4,726 research outputs found
Capacity Outer Bound and Degrees of Freedom of Wiener Phase Noise Channels with Oversampling
The discrete-time Wiener phase noise channel with an integrate-and-dump
multi-sample receiver is studied.
A novel outer bound on the capacity with an average input power constraint is
derived as a function of the oversampling factor.
This outer bound yields the degrees of freedom for the scenario in which the
oversampling factor grows with the transmit power as .
The result shows, perhaps surprisingly, that the largest pre-log that can be
attained with phase modulation at high signal-to-noise ratio is at most .Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, Submitted to Intern. Workshop Inf. Theory (ITW)
201
Capacity bounds for MIMO microwave backhaul links affected by phase noise
We present bounds and a closed-form high-SNR expression for the capacity of
multiple-antenna systems affected by Wiener phase noise. Our results are
developed for the scenario where a single oscillator drives all the
radio-frequency circuitries at each transceiver (common oscillator setup), the
input signal is subject to a peak-power constraint, and the channel matrix is
deterministic. This scenario is relevant for line-of-sight multiple-antenna
microwave backhaul links with sufficiently small antenna spacing at the
transceivers. For the 2 by 2 multiple-antenna case, for a Wiener phase-noise
process with standard deviation equal to 6 degrees, and at the medium/high SNR
values at which microwave backhaul links operate, the upper bound reported in
the paper exhibits a 3 dB gap from a lower bound obtained using 64-QAM.
Furthermore, in this SNR regime the closed-form high-SNR expression is shown to
be accurate.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, to appear in IEEE Transactions on Communication
Uplink Performance of Time-Reversal MRC in Massive MIMO Systems Subject to Phase Noise
Multi-user multiple-input multiple-output (MU-MIMO) cellular systems with an
excess of base station (BS) antennas (Massive MIMO) offer unprecedented
multiplexing gains and radiated energy efficiency. Oscillator phase noise is
introduced in the transmitter and receiver radio frequency chains and severely
degrades the performance of communication systems. We study the effect of
oscillator phase noise in frequency-selective Massive MIMO systems with
imperfect channel state information (CSI). In particular, we consider two
distinct operation modes, namely when the phase noise processes at the BS
antennas are identical (synchronous operation) and when they are independent
(non-synchronous operation). We analyze a linear and low-complexity
time-reversal maximum-ratio combining (TR-MRC) reception strategy. For both
operation modes we derive a lower bound on the sum-capacity and we compare
their performance. Based on the derived achievable sum-rates, we show that with
the proposed receive processing an array gain is achievable. Due
to the phase noise drift the estimated effective channel becomes progressively
outdated. Therefore, phase noise effectively limits the length of the interval
used for data transmission and the number of scheduled users. The derived
achievable rates provide insights into the optimum choice of the data interval
length and the number of scheduled users.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, IEEE Transactions on Wireless
Communications (accepted
On the Impact of Phase Noise in Communication Systems –- Performance Analysis and Algorithms
The mobile industry is preparing to scale up the network capacity by a factor of 1000x in order to cope with the staggering growth in mobile traffic. As a consequence, there is a tremendous pressure on the network infrastructure, where more cost-effective, flexible, high speed connectivity solutions are being sought for. In this regard, massive multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems, and millimeter-wave communication systems are new physical layer technologies, which promise to facilitate the 1000 fold increase in network capacity. However, these technologies are extremely prone to hardware impairments like phase noise caused by noisy oscillators. Furthermore, wireless backhaul networks are an effective solution to transport data by using high-order signal constellations, which are also susceptible to phase noise impairments.
Analyzing the performance of wireless communication systems impaired by oscillator phase noise, and designing systems to operate efficiently in strong phase noise conditions are critical problems in communication theory. The criticality of these problems is accentuated with the growing interest in new physical layer technologies, and the deployment of wireless backhaul networks. This forms the main motivation for this thesis where we analyze the impact of phase noise on the system performance, and we also design algorithms in order to mitigate phase noise and its effects.
First, we address the problem of maximum a posteriori (MAP) detection of data in the presence of strong phase noise in single-antenna systems. This is achieved by designing a low-complexity joint phase-estimator data-detector. We show that the proposed method outperforms existing detectors, especially when high order signal constellations are used. Then, in order to further improve system performance, we consider the problem of optimizing signal constellations for transmission over channels impaired by phase noise. Specifically, we design signal constellations such that the error rate performance of the system is minimized, and the information rate of the system is maximized. We observe that these optimized constellations significantly improve the system performance, when compared to conventional constellations, and those proposed in the literature.
Next, we derive the MAP symbol detector for a MIMO system where each antenna at the transceiver has its own oscillator. We propose three suboptimal, low-complexity algorithms for approximately implementing the MAP symbol detector, which involve joint phase noise estimation and data detection. We observe that the proposed techniques significantly outperform the other algorithms in prior works. Finally, we study the impact of phase noise on the performance of a massive MIMO system, where we analyze both uplink and downlink performances. Based on rigorous analyses of the achievable rates, we provide interesting insights for the following question: how should oscillators be connected to the antennas at a base station, which employs a large number of antennas
Dynamics and spike trains statistics in conductance-based Integrate-and-Fire neural networks with chemical and electric synapses
We investigate the effect of electric synapses (gap junctions) on collective
neuronal dynamics and spike statistics in a conductance-based
Integrate-and-Fire neural network, driven by a Brownian noise, where
conductances depend upon spike history. We compute explicitly the time
evolution operator and show that, given the spike-history of the network and
the membrane potentials at a given time, the further dynamical evolution can be
written in a closed form. We show that spike train statistics is described by a
Gibbs distribution whose potential can be approximated with an explicit
formula, when the noise is weak. This potential form encompasses existing
models for spike trains statistics analysis such as maximum entropy models or
Generalized Linear Models (GLM). We also discuss the different types of
correlations: those induced by a shared stimulus and those induced by neurons
interactions.Comment: 42 pages, 1 figure, submitte
Molecular communication in fluid media: The additive inverse Gaussian noise channel
We consider molecular communication, with information conveyed in the time of
release of molecules. The main contribution of this paper is the development of
a theoretical foundation for such a communication system. Specifically, we
develop the additive inverse Gaussian (IG) noise channel model: a channel in
which the information is corrupted by noise with an inverse Gaussian
distribution. We show that such a channel model is appropriate for molecular
communication in fluid media - when propagation between transmitter and
receiver is governed by Brownian motion and when there is positive drift from
transmitter to receiver. Taking advantage of the available literature on the IG
distribution, upper and lower bounds on channel capacity are developed, and a
maximum likelihood receiver is derived. Theory and simulation results are
presented which show that such a channel does not have a single quality measure
analogous to signal-to-noise ratio in the AWGN channel. It is also shown that
the use of multiple molecules leads to reduced error rate in a manner akin to
diversity order in wireless communications. Finally, we discuss some open
problems in molecular communications that arise from the IG system model.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory. Corrects minor typos in the first versio
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