712 research outputs found
Investigation of punctured LDPC codes and time-diversity on free-space optical links
In this paper, we analyze the behavior of DVB-S2 un-punctured/punctured low-density parity-check (LDPC) coded on-off-keying (OOK) under atmospheric turbulence conditions by utilizing time diversity. A performance characterization between these schemes is evaluated, where punctured LDPC code provides a penalty of around 0.1 to 0.2 dB against unpunctured LDPC codes but still provides a coding gain of several dB against uncoded OOK. The combination of channel coding and a bit interleaver results in performance improvements in turbulence conditions. For example, such a system can achieve a coding gain of 16.7 dB in moderate turbulence conditions compared to uncoded OOK
Optimized Bit Mappings for Spatially Coupled LDPC Codes over Parallel Binary Erasure Channels
In many practical communication systems, one binary encoder/decoder pair is
used to communicate over a set of parallel channels. Examples of this setup
include multi-carrier transmission, rate-compatible puncturing of turbo-like
codes, and bit-interleaved coded modulation (BICM). A bit mapper is commonly
employed to determine how the coded bits are allocated to the channels. In this
paper, we study spatially coupled low-density parity check codes over parallel
channels and optimize the bit mapper using BICM as the driving example. For
simplicity, the parallel bit channels that arise in BICM are replaced by
independent binary erasure channels (BECs). For two parallel BECs modeled
according to a 4-PAM constellation labeled by the binary reflected Gray code,
the optimization results show that the decoding threshold can be improved over
a uniform random bit mapper, or, alternatively, the spatial chain length of the
code can be reduced for a given gap to capacity. It is also shown that for
rate-loss free, circular (tail-biting) ensembles, a decoding wave effect can be
initiated using only an optimized bit mapper
Performance Prediction of Nonbinary Forward Error Correction in Optical Transmission Experiments
In this paper, we compare different metrics to predict the error rate of
optical systems based on nonbinary forward error correction (FEC). It is shown
that the correct metric to predict the performance of coded modulation based on
nonbinary FEC is the mutual information. The accuracy of the prediction is
verified in a detailed example with multiple constellation formats, FEC
overheads in both simulations and optical transmission experiments over a
recirculating loop. It is shown that the employed FEC codes must be universal
if performance prediction based on thresholds is used. A tutorial introduction
into the computation of the threshold from optical transmission measurements is
also given.Comment: submitted to IEEE/OSA Journal of Lightwave Technolog
A survey of digital television broadcast transmission techniques
This paper is a survey of the transmission techniques used in digital television (TV) standards worldwide. With the increase in the demand for High-Definition (HD) TV, video-on-demand and mobile TV services, there was a real need for more bandwidth-efficient, flawless and crisp video quality, which motivated the migration from analogue to digital broadcasting. In this paper we present a brief history of the development of TV and then we survey the transmission technology used in different digital terrestrial, satellite, cable and mobile TV standards in different parts of the world. First, we present the Digital Video Broadcasting standards developed in Europe for terrestrial (DVB-T/T2), for satellite (DVB-S/S2), for cable (DVB-C) and for hand-held transmission (DVB-H). We then describe the Advanced Television System Committee standards developed in the USA both for terrestrial (ATSC) and for hand-held transmission (ATSC-M/H). We continue by describing the Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting standards developed in Japan for Terrestrial (ISDB-T) and Satellite (ISDB-S) transmission and then present the International System for Digital Television (ISDTV), which was developed in Brazil by adopteding the ISDB-T physical layer architecture. Following the ISDTV, we describe the Digital Terrestrial television Multimedia Broadcast (DTMB) standard developed in China. Finally, as a design example, we highlight the physical layer implementation of the DVB-T2 standar
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