30 research outputs found

    Journal of Telecommunications and Information Technology, 2005, nr 2

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    Design of large polyphase filters in the Quadratic Residue Number System

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    Temperature aware power optimization for multicore floating-point units

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    Estimating and Tracking Wireless Channels Under Carrier and Sampling Frequency Offsets

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    This article addresses the challenge of estimating and tracking wireless channels under carrier and sampling frequency offsets, which also incorporate phase noise and sampling time jitter. We propose a novel adaptive filter that explicitly estimates the channel impulse response, carrier frequency offset, and sampling frequency offset by minimizing the mean-square error (MSE) and, when the estimated parameters are time-varying, inherently performs tracking. The proposed filter does not have any requirements for the structure of the waveform, but the digital transmitted waveform must be known to the receiver in advance. To aid practical implementation, we derive upper bounds for the filter's step sizes. We also derive expressions for the filter's steady-state MSE performance, by extending the well-known energy conservation relation method to account for the self-induced nonstationarity and coupling of update equations that are inherent in the proposed filter. Theoretical findings are verified by comparison to simulated results. Proof-of-concept measurement results are also provided, which demonstrate that the proposed filter is able to estimate and track a practical wireless channel under carrier and sampling frequency offsets.publishedVersionPeer reviewe

    Oil spill and ship detection using high resolution polarimetric X-band SAR data

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    Among illegal human activities, marine pollution and target detection are the key concern of Maritime Security and Safety. This thesis deals with oil spill and ship detection using high resolution X-band polarimetric SAR (PolSAR). Polarimetry aims at analysing the polarization state of a wave field, in order to obtain physical information from the observed object. In this dissertation PolSAR techniques are suggested as improvement of the current State-of-the-Art of SAR marine pollution and target detection, by examining in depth Near Real Time suitability

    Sensors for Vital Signs Monitoring

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    Sensor technology for monitoring vital signs is an important topic for various service applications, such as entertainment and personalization platforms and Internet of Things (IoT) systems, as well as traditional medical purposes, such as disease indication judgments and predictions. Vital signs for monitoring include respiration and heart rates, body temperature, blood pressure, oxygen saturation, electrocardiogram, blood glucose concentration, brain waves, etc. Gait and walking length can also be regarded as vital signs because they can indirectly indicate human activity and status. Sensing technologies include contact sensors such as electrocardiogram (ECG), electroencephalogram (EEG), photoplethysmogram (PPG), non-contact sensors such as ballistocardiography (BCG), and invasive/non-invasive sensors for diagnoses of variations in blood characteristics or body fluids. Radar, vision, and infrared sensors can also be useful technologies for detecting vital signs from the movement of humans or organs. Signal processing, extraction, and analysis techniques are important in industrial applications along with hardware implementation techniques. Battery management and wireless power transmission technologies, the design and optimization of low-power circuits, and systems for continuous monitoring and data collection/transmission should also be considered with sensor technologies. In addition, machine-learning-based diagnostic technology can be used for extracting meaningful information from continuous monitoring data

    Investigative Development of an UWB Radar for UAS-borne Applications

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    The engineering ethos of the last decade has been miniaturization. Progress in various industries like material design, semiconductor technology, and digital signal processing has resulted in low-profile electrical systems. This has facilitated the means of integration onto platforms. Sensors such as radars are typically large, heavy, and consume a lot of power. Miniaturization of radars can enable important applications like remote sensing the various aspects of the Earth System from Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS). Information about natural topography like ice sheets, vegetation cover, and ocean currents can improve our understanding of the natural processes and continued measurements offer insight into the changes over time. Soil plays a vital role in the Earth’s hydrological cycle. The moisture in soil influences the weather, vegetation, and human endeavors like construction. Models are built using an extensive set of temporal soil moisture data to predict natural disasters like droughts, floods, and landslides. It plays a central role in the areas of agriculture and water resource management and hence can influence policy making and economic decisions. In this work, an investigative approach to the design, build, and test of a 2 – 18 GHz Frequency Modulated Continuous Wave radar for snow and soil measurements is reported. The radar system is designed to be integrated to the Vapor 55 rotorcraft, which is a Group 1 UAS. The radar can operate as a scatterometer to measure backscatter signatures in all four combinations of vertical and horizontal polarizations; or as a nadir-looking sounder for fine-resolution snow thickness measurements. One of the primary contributions of this work is the exploration of a single-module that integrates the radar’s RF transmitter, RF receiver, receiver’s IF section, wideband sweep generator, and the DC bias circuitry for the active components. The sweep generator is based on a phase-locked loop and frequency multiplication/translation stage. The compact assembly is in the form of two multilayer Printed Circuit Boards (PCB) merged together and it occupies an area of nearly 170 cm2. This thesis describes the design, construction, and testing of the module, along with recommendations for future revisions. A commercially off-the-shelf module (Arena series by Tomorrow.io, formerly Remote Sensing Solutions) is the digital backend and it consists of an Arbitrary Waveform Generator (AWG) and a data acquisition system capable of sampling up to 250 MSPS. The module is low-profile with dimensions of 7.6 cm x 19.3 cm x 2.3 cm and weighs less than 400 g including the separate aluminum enclosure intended to be integrated with the radar’s RF and mixed-signal sections. A second contribution of this work is the design of a prototype antenna front-end, which consists of four four-element antenna arrays housed in a Delrin plastic fixture and are fed using custom-designed microstrip power dividers. The dimensions of the fixture are 13.7 cm x 5.9 cm x 5.5 cm and the uniform elemental distance is 2.5 cm. The arrays are fastened to a metal sheet and a custom-designed four-layer fiberglass composite fairing protects the arrays. The entire front-end is integrated on the rotorcraft and measured in an anechoic chamber. The measured, fully integrated return loss of each array covers 2 – 18 GHz and the highest value is -7.22 dB at 5.23 GHz. The radiation pattern shows a distinct nadir-pointing main lobe for nearly the entire bandwidth, however the effects of the platform increase the average side-lobe levels to less than 10 dB for 12 – 18 GHz. The measured maximum nadir gain is 15.88 dB at 10 GHz and there is a greater than 6 dB variation in magnitude within the bandwidth. This variation is compensated by processing the backscatter data over distinct sub-bands that have a maximum nadir gain variation of 6 dB. Lastly, the thesis describes two system tests conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of a prototype radar with soil as the target. These are proof-of-concept measurements to detect differences in backscatter signatures between dry and wet soil. Gravimetric measurements of collected soil samples indicate an average change of 9.5% between the two moisture states. The antenna front-end is exclusively characterized using a Vector Network Analyzer and measurements are recorded for both co- and cross-polarization at three look angles of nadir, 15°, and 30°. The relative measurements are repeated on the same patch of land with a 1U version of the miniaturized radar. There are distinct differences in relative received power and backscatter profile for all four polarizations and at each look angle. It is observed that vertical polarization indicates a change in moisture content by an increase in the relative received power over an extended range beyond the primary backscatter signal. The horizontal polarization results in a greater peak received power for the primary backscatter signal, relative to the vertical polarization. The degradation in backscatter profile for vertical polarization is higher than horizontal polarization as a function of angle and this is observed for both dry and wet soil.The ETD Release form has been added to this record as a License bitstrea

    Multifunction Radios and Interference Suppression for Enhanced Reliability and Security of Wireless Systems

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    Wireless connectivity, with its relative ease of over-the-air information sharing, is a key technological enabler that facilitates many of the essential applications, such as satellite navigation, cellular communication, and media broadcasting, that are nowadays taken for granted. However, that relative ease of over-the-air communications has significant drawbacks too. On one hand, the broadcast nature of wireless communications means that one receiver can receive the superposition of multiple transmitted signals. But on the other hand, it means that multiple receivers can receive the same transmitted signal. The former leads to congestion and concerns about reliability because of the limited nature of the electromagnetic spectrum and the vulnerability to interference. The latter means that wirelessly transmitted information is inherently insecure. This thesis aims to provide insights and means for improving physical layer reliability and security of wireless communications by, in a sense, combining the two aspects above through simultaneous and same frequency transmit and receive operation. This is so as to ultimately increase the safety of environments where wireless devices function or where malicious wirelessly operated devices (e.g., remote-controlled drones) potentially raise safety concerns. Specifically, two closely related research directions are pursued. Firstly, taking advantage of in-band full-duplex (IBFD) radio technology to benefit the reliability and security of wireless communications in the form of multifunction IBFD radios. Secondly, extending the self-interference cancellation (SIC) capabilities of IBFD radios to multiradio platforms to take advantage of these same concepts on a wider scale. Within the first research direction, a theoretical analysis framework is developed and then used to comprehensively study the benefits and drawbacks of simultaneously combining signals detection and jamming on the same frequency within a single platform. Also, a practical prototype capable of such operation is implemented and its performance analyzed based on actual measurements. The theoretical and experimental analysis altogether give a concrete understanding of the quantitative benefits of simultaneous same-frequency operations over carrying out the operations in an alternating manner. Simultaneously detecting and jamming signals specifically is shown to somewhat increase the effective range of a smart jammer compared to intermittent detection and jamming, increasing its reliability. Within the second research direction, two interference mitigation methods are proposed that extend the SIC capabilities from single platform IBFD radios to those not physically connected. Such separation brings additional challenges in modeling the interference compared to the SIC problem, which the proposed methods address. These methods then allow multiple radios to intentionally generate and use interference for controlling access to the electromagnetic spectrum. Practical measurement results demonstrate that this effectively allows the use of cooperative jamming to prevent unauthorized nodes from processing any signals of interest, while authorized nodes can use interference mitigation to still access the same signals. This in turn provides security at the physical layer of wireless communications
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