366 research outputs found
BER of MRC for M-QAM with imperfect channel estimation over correlated Nakagami-m fading
In this contribution, we provide an exact BER analysis for M-QAM transmission over arbitrarily correlated Nakagami-m fading channels with maximal-ratio combining (MRC) and imperfect channel estimation at the receiver. Assuming an arbitrary joint fading distribution and a generic pilot-based channel estimation method, we derive an exact BER expression that involves an expectation over (at most) 4 variables, irrespective of the number of receive antennas. The resulting BER expression includes well-known PDFs and the PDF of only the norm of the channel vector. In order to obtain the latter PDF for arbitrarily correlated Nakagami-m fading, several approaches from the literature are discussed. For identically distributed and arbitrarily correlated Nakagami-m channels with integer m, we present several BER performance results, which are obtained from numerical evaluation and confirmed by straightforward computer simulations. The numerical evaluation of the exact BER expression turns out to be much less time-consuming than the computer simulations
Performance analysis of MIMO-OFDM systems using complex Gaussian quadratic forms
En este trabajo se proponen aportaciones originales para el análisis de prestaciones en sistemas multiantena con múltiples portadoras, mediante el desarrollo de nuevas técnicas matemáticas para el cálculo de probabilidades de error. AsÃ, ha sido posible analizar el efecto de no idealidades (estimación de canal imperfecta, offset de continua, desbalanceo I/Q…) en las prestaciones de sistemas de comunicaciones móviles e inalámbricas
Robustness maximization of parallel multichannel systems
Bit error rate (BER) minimization and SNR-gap maximization, two robustness
optimization problems, are solved, under average power and bit-rate
constraints, according to the waterfilling policy. Under peak-power constraint
the solutions differ and this paper gives bit-loading solutions of both
robustness optimization problems over independent parallel channels. The study
is based on analytical approach with generalized Lagrangian relaxation tool and
on greedy-type algorithm approach. Tight BER expressions are used for square
and rectangular quadrature amplitude modulations. Integer bit solution of
analytical continuous bit-rates is performed with a new generalized secant
method. The asymptotic convergence of both robustness optimizations is proved
for both analytical and algorithmic approaches. We also prove that, in
conventional margin maximization problem, the equivalence between SNR-gap
maximization and power minimization does not hold with peak-power limitation.
Based on a defined dissimilarity measure, bit-loading solutions are compared
over power line communication channel for multicarrier systems. Simulation
results confirm the asymptotic convergence of both allocation policies. In non
asymptotic regime the allocation policies can be interchanged depending on the
robustness measure and the operating point of the communication system. The low
computational effort of the suboptimal solution based on analytical approach
leads to a good trade-off between performance and complexity.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, submitted to IEEE Trans. Inform. Theor
General BER Expression for One-Dimensional Constellations
A novel general ready-to-use bit-error rate (BER) expression for
one-dimensional constellations is developed. The BER analysis is performed for
bit patterns that form a labeling. The number of patterns for equally spaced
M-PAM constellations with different BER is analyzed.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the IEEE Global Communications
Conference (GLOBECOM) 2012. Remark 3 modifie
On the BICM Capacity
Optimal binary labelings, input distributions, and input alphabets are
analyzed for the so-called bit-interleaved coded modulation (BICM) capacity,
paying special attention to the low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) regime. For
8-ary pulse amplitude modulation (PAM) and for 0.75 bit/symbol, the folded
binary code results in a higher capacity than the binary reflected gray code
(BRGC) and the natural binary code (NBC). The 1 dB gap between the additive
white Gaussian noise (AWGN) capacity and the BICM capacity with the BRGC can be
almost completely removed if the input symbol distribution is properly
selected. First-order asymptotics of the BICM capacity for arbitrary input
alphabets and distributions, dimensions, mean, variance, and binary labeling
are developed. These asymptotics are used to define first-order optimal (FOO)
constellations for BICM, i.e. constellations that make BICM achieve the Shannon
limit -1.59 \tr{dB}. It is shown that the \Eb/N_0 required for reliable
transmission at asymptotically low rates in BICM can be as high as infinity,
that for uniform input distributions and 8-PAM there are only 72 classes of
binary labelings with a different first-order asymptotic behavior, and that
this number is reduced to only 26 for 8-ary phase shift keying (PSK). A general
answer to the question of FOO constellations for BICM is also given: using the
Hadamard transform, it is found that for uniform input distributions, a
constellation for BICM is FOO if and only if it is a linear projection of a
hypercube. A constellation based on PAM or quadrature amplitude modulation
input alphabets is FOO if and only if they are labeled by the NBC; if the
constellation is based on PSK input alphabets instead, it can never be FOO if
the input alphabet has more than four points, regardless of the labeling.Comment: Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
On the Exact BER of Bit-Wise Demodulators for One-Dimensional Constellations
The optimal bit-wise demodulator for M-ary pulse amplitude modulation (PAM)
over the additive white Gaussian noise channel is analyzed in terms of uncoded
bit-error rate (BER). New closed-form BER expressions for 4-PAM with any
labeling are developed. Moreover, closed-form BER expressions for 11 out of 23
possible bit patterns for 8-PAM are presented, which enable us to obtain the
BER for 8-PAM with some of the most popular labelings, including the binary
reflected Gray code and the natural binary code. Numerical results show that,
regardless of the labeling, there is no difference between the optimal
demodulator and the symbol-wise demodulator for any BER of practical interest
(below 0.1)
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