21,791 research outputs found

    Energy considerations regarding next generation passive optical networks

    Get PDF
    The increasing demand for faster broadband access requires the development of next-generation Passive Optical Networks (PONs) operating at very high bit rates (e.g. 40 Gb/s). On the same time, energy efficiency in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) infrastructure has become a very important topic. In this paper, several proposed solutions for future high-speed PONs, such as coherent and incoherent multilevel signaling, wavelength-multiplexed On-Off Keying (OOK) and Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), are examined with regards to the energy consumption of the system, with results indicating that the necessary bit rates can be provided without sacrificing energy efficiency

    Hybrid M-FSK/DQPSK Modulations for CubeSat Picosatellites

    Get PDF
    Conventional CubeSat radio systems typically use one of several basic modulations, such as AFSK, GMSK, BPSK, QPSK and OOK or switch between them on demand if possible. These modulations represent a bal¬anced trade-off between good energy efficiency of high order M-FSK modulation and good spectral efficiency of high order M-QAM modulation. Utilization of modulations with the best energy efficiency is not possible due to strict limits on occupied frequency bandwidth. In this paper the proposed group of hybrid modulations and proposed hybrid modulator and demodulator are presented. Novel solution offer interesting possibilities of increasing spectral efficiency as well as energy efficiency of basic M-FSK modulation by embedding DQPSK symbols between two M-FSK symbols. Such group of hybrid modulations offers suitable properties for picosatellite, e.g. simple realization onboard the picosatellite, better energy and spectral efficiency, low PAPR, wide range of adaptation by changing the order of M-FSK, suitable for easy non-coherent demodulation, good immunity to Doppler effect with DM-FSK coding

    Fundamental Limits of Low-Density Spreading NOMA with Fading

    Full text link
    Spectral efficiency of low-density spreading non-orthogonal multiple access channels in the presence of fading is derived for linear detection with independent decoding as well as optimum decoding. The large system limit, where both the number of users and number of signal dimensions grow with fixed ratio, called load, is considered. In the case of optimum decoding, it is found that low-density spreading underperforms dense spreading for all loads. Conversely, linear detection is characterized by different behaviors in the underloaded vs. overloaded regimes. In particular, it is shown that spectral efficiency changes smoothly as load increases. However, in the overloaded regime, the spectral efficiency of low- density spreading is higher than that of dense spreading

    Time Localization and Capacity of Faster-Than-Nyquist Signaling

    Full text link
    In this paper, we consider communication over the bandwidth limited analog white Gaussian noise channel using non-orthogonal pulses. In particular, we consider non-orthogonal transmission by signaling samples at a rate higher than the Nyquist rate. Using the faster-than-Nyquist (FTN) framework, Mazo showed that one may transmit symbols carried by sinc pulses at a higher rate than that dictated by Nyquist without loosing bit error rate. However, as we will show in this paper, such pulses are not necessarily well localized in time. In fact, assuming that signals in the FTN framework are well localized in time, one can construct a signaling scheme that violates the Shannon capacity bound. We also show directly that FTN signals are in general not well localized in time. Therefore, the results of Mazo do not imply that one can transmit more data per time unit without degrading performance in terms of error probability. We also consider FTN signaling in the case of pulses that are different from the sinc pulses. We show that one can use a precoding scheme of low complexity to remove the inter-symbol interference. This leads to the possibility of increasing the number of transmitted samples per time unit and compensate for spectral inefficiency due to signaling at the Nyquist rate of the non sinc pulses. We demonstrate the power of the precoding scheme by simulations

    Performance analysis of feedback-free collision resolution NDMA protocol

    Get PDF
    To support communications of a large number of deployed devices while guaranteeing limited signaling load, low energy consumption, and high reliability, future cellular systems require efficient random access protocols. However, how to address the collision resolution at the receiver is still the main bottleneck of these protocols. The network-assisted diversity multiple access (NDMA) protocol solves the issue and attains the highest potential throughput at the cost of keeping devices active to acquire feedback and repeating transmissions until successful decoding. In contrast, another potential approach is the feedback-free NDMA (FF-NDMA) protocol, in which devices do repeat packets in a pre-defined number of consecutive time slots without waiting for feedback associated with repetitions. Here, we investigate the FF-NDMA protocol from a cellular network perspective in order to elucidate under what circumstances this scheme is more energy efficient than NDMA. We characterize analytically the FF-NDMA protocol along with the multipacket reception model and a finite Markov chain. Analytic expressions for throughput, delay, capture probability, energy, and energy efficiency are derived. Then, clues for system design are established according to the different trade-offs studied. Simulation results show that FF-NDMA is more energy efficient than classical NDMA and HARQ-NDMA at low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and at medium SNR when the load increases.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
    corecore