10 research outputs found
An investigation into the design and performance of base station antenna diversity in digital mobile radio networks
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:DX185533 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
Wireless Channel Characterization in the 5 GHz Microwave Landing System Extension Band for Airport Surface Areas
In this project final report, entitled "Wireless Channel Characterization in the 5 GHz Microwave Landing System Extension Band for Airport Surface Areas," we provide a detailed description and model representation for the wireless channel in the airport surface environment in this band. In this executive summary, we review report contents, describe the achieved objectives and major findings, and highlight significant conclusions and recommendations
A STUDY ON WIRELESS COMMUNICATION ERROR PERFORMANCE AND PATH LOSS PREDICTION
One channel model that characterises multipath fading eļ¬ect of a wireless channel is
called Flat Rayleigh Fading channel model. Given the properties of Flat Rayleigh Fading
channel, an equation to ļ¬nd the capacity of a Flat Rayleigh fading channel with hard
decision decoding is derived. The diļ¬erence of power requirement to achieve the Additive
White Gaussian Noise (AWGN) capacity over a Flat Rayleigh Fading channel fading is
found to increase exponentially with Es /N0 . Upper and lower bounds of error performance
of linear block codes over a Flat Rayleigh Fading channel are also studied.
With the condition that the excess delay of a channel is known earlier, it is shown that a
correlator with shorter length, according to excess delay of the channel, can be constructed
for use in wireless channel response measurements. Therefore, a rule of construction
of a shorter length correlator is deļ¬ned, involving concatenation of parts of a Constant
Amplitude Zero Auto-Correlation (CAZAC) sequence.
Simulation of [136,68,24] Double Circulant Code with Dorsch List Decoding is also
done in order to evaluate error performance of the channel coding scheme over one of the
IEEE Wireless Metropolitan Area Network (WirelessMAN) channel models, the Stanford
University Interim Channel Model No. 5 (SUI-5) channel. Performance of the channel cod-
ing was severely degraded over the SUI-5 channel when it is compared to its performance
over the AWGN channel.
Indoor path losses within three multiļ¬oor oļ¬ce buildings were investigated at 433
MHz, 869 MHz and 1249 MHz. The work involved series of extensive received signal
strength measurements within the buildings for all of the considered frequencies. Results
have shown that indoor path loss is higher within a square footprint building than indoor
path loss in a rectangular building. Parameters of Log-Distance Path Loss and Floor
Attenuation Factor Path Loss models have been derived from the measurement data. In
addition, a new indoor path loss prediction model was derived to cater for path loss pre-
diction within multiļ¬oor buildings with indoor atriums. The model performs with better
prediction accuracy when compared with Log-Distance Path Loss and Floor Attenuation
Factor Path Loss models.Ministry of Higher Education of Malaysia, Universiti Teknologi Malaysi
Proceedings of the Fifteenth NASA Propagation Experimenters Meeting (NAPEX 15) and the Advanced Communications Technology Satellite (ACTS) Propagation Studies Miniworkshop
The NASA Propagation Experimenters Meeting (NAPEX), supported by the NASA Propagation Program, is convened annually to discuss studies made on radio wave propagation by investigators from domestic and international organizations. The meeting was organized into three technical sessions. The first session was dedicated to Olympus and ACTS studies and experiments, the second session was focused on the propagation studies and measurements, and the third session covered computer-based propagation model development. In total, sixteen technical papers and some informal contributions were presented. Following NAPEX 15, the Advanced Communications Technology Satellite (ACTS) miniworkshop was held on 29 Jun. 1991, to review ACTS propagation activities, with emphasis on ACTS hardware development and experiment planning. Five papers were presented
Optical Communication
Optical communication is very much useful in telecommunication systems, data processing and networking. It consists of a transmitter that encodes a message into an optical signal, a channel that carries the signal to its desired destination, and a receiver that reproduces the message from the received optical signal. It presents up to date results on communication systems, along with the explanations of their relevance, from leading researchers in this field. The chapters cover general concepts of optical communication, components, systems, networks, signal processing and MIMO systems. In recent years, optical components and other enhanced signal processing functions are also considered in depth for optical communications systems. The researcher has also concentrated on optical devices, networking, signal processing, and MIMO systems and other enhanced functions for optical communication. This book is targeted at research, development and design engineers from the teams in manufacturing industry, academia and telecommunication industries
Recommended from our members
Geostatistical Techniques for Practical Wireless Network Coverage Mapping
The problem of mapping the extent of āusableā coverage of an existing wireless network is important in a large number of applications, including communicating the abilities of the network to users, identifying coverage gaps and planning expansion, discovering opportunities for spectrum reuse, and determining possible sources of interference with other networks. This thesis addresses fundamental but unsolved problems of measurement-based wireless coverage mapping: where should measurements be made, how many are necessary, and what can be said about the coverage at points that have not been measured. To address these problems, this thesis advocates a geostatistical approach using optimized spatial sampling and ordinary Kriging. A complete system for coverage mapping is developed that systematically addresses measurement, sampling, spatial modeling, interpolation, and visualization. This geostatistical method is able to produce more accurate and robust coverage maps than the current state of the art methods, and is able to discover coverage holes as effectively as dedicated heuristic methods using a small number of measurements. Several important practical extensions are investigated: applying these methods to drive-test measurements which have been resampled to alleviate effects from sampling bias, and crowd-sourced coverage mapping applications where volunteer-collected measurements may be sparse or infrequent. The resulting maps can then be refined iteratively, and updated systematically over time using an optimized iterative sampling scheme. An extensive validation is performed using measurements of production WiFi, WiMax, GSM, and LTE networks in representative urban and suburban outdoor environments
Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995)
The files on this record represent the various databases that originally composed the CD-ROM issue of "Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding" database, which is now part of the Dudley Knox Library's Abstracts and Selected Full Text Documents on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995) Collection. (See Calhoun record https://calhoun.nps.edu/handle/10945/57364 for further information on this collection and the bibliography).
Due to issues of technological obsolescence preventing current and future audiences from accessing the bibliography, DKL exported and converted into the three files on this record the various databases contained in the CD-ROM.
The contents of these files are:
1) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_xls.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.xls: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format; RDFA_Glossary.xls: Glossary of terms, in Excel 97-2003 Workbookformat; RDFA_Biographies.xls: Biographies of leading figures, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format];
2) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_csv.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.TXT: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in CSV format; RDFA_Glossary.TXT: Glossary of terms, in CSV format; RDFA_Biographies.TXT: Biographies of leading figures, in CSV format];
3) RDFA_CompleteBibliography.pdf: A human readable display of the bibliographic data, as a means of double-checking any possible deviations due to conversion
Safety and Reliability - Safe Societies in a Changing World
The contributions cover a wide range of methodologies and application areas for safety and reliability that contribute to safe societies in a changing world. These methodologies and applications include: - foundations of risk and reliability assessment and management
- mathematical methods in reliability and safety
- risk assessment
- risk management
- system reliability
- uncertainty analysis
- digitalization and big data
- prognostics and system health management
- occupational safety
- accident and incident modeling
- maintenance modeling and applications
- simulation for safety and reliability analysis
- dynamic risk and barrier management
- organizational factors and safety culture
- human factors and human reliability
- resilience engineering
- structural reliability
- natural hazards
- security
- economic analysis in risk managemen