6,488 research outputs found
Estimation of Sparse MIMO Channels with Common Support
We consider the problem of estimating sparse communication channels in the
MIMO context. In small to medium bandwidth communications, as in the current
standards for OFDM and CDMA communication systems (with bandwidth up to 20
MHz), such channels are individually sparse and at the same time share a common
support set. Since the underlying physical channels are inherently
continuous-time, we propose a parametric sparse estimation technique based on
finite rate of innovation (FRI) principles. Parametric estimation is especially
relevant to MIMO communications as it allows for a robust estimation and
concise description of the channels. The core of the algorithm is a
generalization of conventional spectral estimation methods to multiple input
signals with common support. We show the application of our technique for
channel estimation in OFDM (uniformly/contiguous DFT pilots) and CDMA downlink
(Walsh-Hadamard coded schemes). In the presence of additive white Gaussian
noise, theoretical lower bounds on the estimation of SCS channel parameters in
Rayleigh fading conditions are derived. Finally, an analytical spatial channel
model is derived, and simulations on this model in the OFDM setting show the
symbol error rate (SER) is reduced by a factor 2 (0 dB of SNR) to 5 (high SNR)
compared to standard non-parametric methods - e.g. lowpass interpolation.Comment: 12 pages / 7 figures. Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Communicatio
Matrix and Tensor-based ESPRIT Algorithm for Joint Angle and Delay Estimation in 2D Active Broadband Massive MIMO Systems and Analysis of Direction of Arrival Estimation Algorithms for Basal Ice Sheet Tomography
In this thesis, we apply and analyze three direction of arrival algorithms (DoA) to tackle two distinct problems: one belongs to wireless communication, the other to radar signal processing. Though the essence of these two problems is DoA estimation, their formulation, underlying assumptions, application scenario, etc. are totally different. Hence, we write them separately, with ESPRIT algorithm the focus of Part I and MUSIC and MLE detailed in Part II. For wireless communication scenario, mobile data traffic is expected to have an exponential growth in the future. In order to meet the challenge as well as the form factor limitation on the base station, 2D "massive MIMO" has been proposed as one of the enabling technologies to significantly increase the spectral efficiency of a wireless system. In "massive MIMO" systems, a base station will rely on the uplink sounding signals from mobile stations to figure out the spatial information to perform MIMO beamforming. Accordingly, multi-dimensional parameter estimation of a ray-based multi-path wireless channel becomes crucial for such systems to realize the predicted capacity gains. In the first Part, we study joint angle and delay estimation for 2D "massive MIMO" systems in mobile wireless communications. To be specific, we first introduce a low complexity time delay and 2D DoA estimation algorithm based on unitary transformation. Some closed-form results and capacity analysis are involved. Furthermore, the matrix and tensor-based 3D ESPRIT-like algorithms are applied to jointly estimate angles and delay. Significant improvements of the performance can be observed in our communication scheme. Finally, we found that azimuth estimation is more vulnerable compared to elevation estimation. Results suggest that the dimension of the antenna array at the base station plays an important role in determining the estimation performance. These insights will be useful for designing practical "massive MIMO" systems in future mobile wireless communications. For the problem of radar remote sensing of ice sheet topography, one of the key requirements for deriving more realistic ice sheet models is to obtain a good set of basal measurements that enables accurate estimation of bed roughness and conditions. For this purpose, 3D tomography of the ice bed has been successfully implemented with the help of DoA algorithms such as MUSIC and MLE techniques. These methods have enabled fine resolution in the cross-track dimension using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images obtained from single pass multichannel data. In Part II, we analyze and compare the results obtained from the spectral MUSIC algorithm and an alternating projection (AP) based MLE technique. While the MUSIC algorithm is more attractive computationally compared to MLE, the performance of the latter is known to be superior in most situations. The SAR focused datasets provide a good case study to explore the performance of these two techniques to the application of ice sheet bed elevation estimation. For the antenna array geometry and sample support used in our tomographic application, MUSIC performs better originally using a cross-over analysis where the estimated topography from crossing flightlines are compared for consistency. However, after several improvements applied to MLE, i.e., replacing ideal steering vector generation with measured steering vectors, automatic determination of the number of scatter sources, smoothing the 3D tomography in order to get a more accurate height estimation and introducing a quality metric for the estimated signals, etc., MLE outperforms MUSIC. It confirms that MLE is indeed the optimal estimator for our particular ice bed tomographic application. We observe that, the spatial bottom smoothing, aiming to remove the artifacts made by MLE algorithm, is the most essential step in the post-processing procedure. The 3D tomography we obtained lays a good foundation for further analysis and modeling of ice sheets
Idealized computational models for auditory receptive fields
This paper presents a theory by which idealized models of auditory receptive
fields can be derived in a principled axiomatic manner, from a set of
structural properties to enable invariance of receptive field responses under
natural sound transformations and ensure internal consistency between
spectro-temporal receptive fields at different temporal and spectral scales.
For defining a time-frequency transformation of a purely temporal sound
signal, it is shown that the framework allows for a new way of deriving the
Gabor and Gammatone filters as well as a novel family of generalized Gammatone
filters, with additional degrees of freedom to obtain different trade-offs
between the spectral selectivity and the temporal delay of time-causal temporal
window functions.
When applied to the definition of a second-layer of receptive fields from a
spectrogram, it is shown that the framework leads to two canonical families of
spectro-temporal receptive fields, in terms of spectro-temporal derivatives of
either spectro-temporal Gaussian kernels for non-causal time or the combination
of a time-causal generalized Gammatone filter over the temporal domain and a
Gaussian filter over the logspectral domain. For each filter family, the
spectro-temporal receptive fields can be either separable over the
time-frequency domain or be adapted to local glissando transformations that
represent variations in logarithmic frequencies over time. Within each domain
of either non-causal or time-causal time, these receptive field families are
derived by uniqueness from the assumptions.
It is demonstrated how the presented framework allows for computation of
basic auditory features for audio processing and that it leads to predictions
about auditory receptive fields with good qualitative similarity to biological
receptive fields measured in the inferior colliculus (ICC) and primary auditory
cortex (A1) of mammals.Comment: 55 pages, 22 figures, 3 table
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Intelligent joint channel parameter estimation techniques for mobile wireless positioning applications
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Mobile wireless positioning has recently received great attention. For mobile wireless
communication networks, an inherently suitable approach is to obtain the parameters
that are used for positioning estimates from the radio signal measurements between a
mobile device and one or more xed base stations. However, obtaining accurate estimates of these location-dependent channel parameters is a challenging task. The focus of this thesis is on the estimation of these channel parameters for mobile wireless positioning
applications. In particular, we investigate novel estimators that jointly estimate
more than one type of channel parameters. We rst perform a comprehensive critical
review on the most recent and popular joint channel parameter estimation techniques.
Secondly, we improve a state-of-the-art technique, namely the Space Alternating Generalised Expectation maximisation (SAGE) algorithm by employing adaptive interference
cancellation to improve the estimation accuracy of weaker paths. Thirdly, a novel intelligent channel parameter estimation technique using Evolution Strategy (ES) is proposed to overcome the drawbacks of the existing iterative maximum likelihood methods. Furthermore, given that in reality it is di cult to obtain the number of multipath in advance, we propose a two tier Hierarchically Organised ES to jointly estimate the number of multipath as well as the channel parameters. Finally, we extend the proposed ES method to further estimate the Doppler shift in mobile environments. Our proposed intelligent joint channel estimation techniques are shown to exhibit excellent performance even with low Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) channel conditions as well as robust against uncertainties in initialisations.EPSRC and Cambridge Silicon Radi
Timing jitter of passively mode-locked semiconductor lasers subject to optical feedback; a semi-analytic approach
We propose a semi-analytical method of calculating the timing fluctuations in
mode-locked semiconductor lasers and apply it to study the effect of delayed
coherent optical feedback on pulse timing jitter in these lasers. The proposed
method greatly reduces computation times and therefore allows for the
investigation of the dependence of timing fluctuations over greater parameter
domains. We show that resonant feedback leads to a reduction in the timing
jitter and that a frequency-pulling region forms about the main resonances,
within which a timing jitter reduction is observed. The width of these
frequency-pulling regions increases linearly with short feedback delay times.
We derive an analytic expression for the timing jitter, which predicts a
monotonous decrease in the timing jitter for resonant feedback of increasing
delay lengths, when timing jitter effects are fully separated from amplitude
jitter effects. For long feedback cavities the decrease in timing jitter scales
approximately as with the increase of the feedback delay time
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