40 research outputs found

    Code design and analysis for multiple access communications

    Get PDF
    This thesis explores various coding aspects of multiple access communications, mainly for spread spectrum multiaccess(SSMA) communications and collaborative coding multiaccess(CCMA) communications. Both the SSMA and CCMA techniques permit efficient simultaneous transmission by several users sharing a common channel, without subdivision in time or frequency. The general principle behind these two multiaccess schemes is that one can find sets of signals (codes) which can be combined together to form a composite signal; on reception, the individual signals in the set can each be recovered from the composite signal. For the CCMA scheme, the isolation between users is based on the code structure; for the SSMA scheme, on the other hand, the isolation between users is based on the autocorrelation functions(ACFs) and crosscorrelation functions (CCFs) of the code sequences. It is clear that, in either case, the code design is the key to the system design.For the CCMA system with a multiaccess binary adder channel, a class of superimposed codes is analyzed. It is proved that every constant weight code of weight w and maximal correlation λ corresponds to a subclass of disjunctive codes of order T 3, the out-of-phase ACFs and CCFs of the codes are constant and equal to √L. In addition, all codes of the same length are mutually orthogonal.2. Maximal length sequences (m-sequences) over Gaussian integers, suitable for use with QAM modulation, are considered. Two sub-classes of m-sequences with quasi-perfect periodic autocorrelations are obtained. The CCFs between the decimated m-sequences are studied. By applying a simple operation, it is shown that some m-sequences over rational and Gaussian integers can be transformed into perfect sequences with impulsive ACFs.3. Frank codes and Chu codes have perfect periodic ACFs and optimum periodic CCFs. In addition, it is shown that they also have very favourable nonperiodic ACFs; some new results concerning the behaviour of the nonperiodic ACFs are derived. Further, it is proved that the sets of combinedFrank/Chu codes, which contain a larger number of codes than either of the two constituent sets, also have very good periodic CCFs. Based on Frank codes and Chu codes, two interesting classes of real-valued codes with good correlation properties are defined. It is shown that these codes have periodic complementary properties and good periodic and nonperiodic ACF/CCFs.Finally, a hybrid CCMA/SSMA coding scheme is proposed. This new hybrid coding scheme provides a very flexible and powerful multiple accessing capability and allows simple and efficient decoding. Given an SSMA system with K users and a CCMA system with N users, where at most T users are active at any time, then the hybrid system will have K . N users with at most T.K users active at any time. The hybrid CCMA/SSMA coding scheme is superior to the individual CCMA system or SSMA system in terms of information rate, number of users, decoding complexity and external interference rejection capability

    Code design and analysis for multiple access communications

    Get PDF
    This thesis explores various coding aspects of multiple access communications, mainly for spread spectrum multiaccess(SSMA) communications and collaborative coding multiaccess(CCMA) communications. Both the SSMA and CCMA techniques permit efficient simultaneous transmission by several users sharing a common channel, without subdivision in time or frequency. The general principle behind these two multiaccess schemes is that one can find sets of signals (codes) which can be combined together to form a composite signal; on reception, the individual signals in the set can each be recovered from the composite signal. For the CCMA scheme, the isolation between users is based on the code structure; for the SSMA scheme, on the other hand, the isolation between users is based on the autocorrelation functions(ACFs) and crosscorrelation functions (CCFs) of the code sequences. It is clear that, in either case, the code design is the key to the system design.For the CCMA system with a multiaccess binary adder channel, a class of superimposed codes is analyzed. It is proved that every constant weight code of weight w and maximal correlation λ corresponds to a subclass of disjunctive codes of order T 3, the out-of-phase ACFs and CCFs of the codes are constant and equal to √L. In addition, all codes of the same length are mutually orthogonal.2. Maximal length sequences (m-sequences) over Gaussian integers, suitable for use with QAM modulation, are considered. Two sub-classes of m-sequences with quasi-perfect periodic autocorrelations are obtained. The CCFs between the decimated m-sequences are studied. By applying a simple operation, it is shown that some m-sequences over rational and Gaussian integers can be transformed into perfect sequences with impulsive ACFs.3. Frank codes and Chu codes have perfect periodic ACFs and optimum periodic CCFs. In addition, it is shown that they also have very favourable nonperiodic ACFs; some new results concerning the behaviour of the nonperiodic ACFs are derived. Further, it is proved that the sets of combinedFrank/Chu codes, which contain a larger number of codes than either of the two constituent sets, also have very good periodic CCFs. Based on Frank codes and Chu codes, two interesting classes of real-valued codes with good correlation properties are defined. It is shown that these codes have periodic complementary properties and good periodic and nonperiodic ACF/CCFs.Finally, a hybrid CCMA/SSMA coding scheme is proposed. This new hybrid coding scheme provides a very flexible and powerful multiple accessing capability and allows simple and efficient decoding. Given an SSMA system with K users and a CCMA system with N users, where at most T users are active at any time, then the hybrid system will have K . N users with at most T.K users active at any time. The hybrid CCMA/SSMA coding scheme is superior to the individual CCMA system or SSMA system in terms of information rate, number of users, decoding complexity and external interference rejection capability

    Part I:

    Get PDF

    Code-division multiplexing

    Get PDF
    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2004.Includes bibliographical references (p. 395-404).(cont.) counterpart. Among intra-cell orthogonal schemes, we show that the most efficient broadcast signal is a linear superposition of many binary orthogonal waveforms. The information set is also binary. Each orthogonal waveform is generated by modulating a periodic stream of finite-length chip pulses with a receiver-specific signature code that is derived from a special class of binary antipodal, superimposed recursive orthogonal code sequences. With the imposition of practical pulse shapes for carrier modulation, we show that multi-carrier format using cosine functions has higher bandwidth efficiency than the single-carrier format, even in an ideal Gaussian channel model. Each pulse is shaped via a prototype baseband filter such that when the demodulated signal is detected through a baseband matched filter, the resulting output samples satisfy the Generalized Nyquist criterion. Specifically, we propose finite-length, time overlapping orthogonal pulse shapes that are g-Nyquist. They are derived from extended and modulated lapped transforms by proving the equivalence between Perfect Reconstruction and Generalized Nyquist criteria. Using binary data modulation format, we measure and analyze the accuracy of various Gaussian approximation methods for spread-spectrum modulated (SSM) signalling ...We study forward link performance of a multi-user cellular wireless network. In our proposed cellular broadcast model, the receiver population is partitioned into smaller mutually exclusive subsets called cells. In each cell an autonomous transmitter with average transmit power constraint communicates to all receivers in its cell by broadcasting. The broadcast signal is a multiplex of independent information from many remotely located sources. Each receiver extracts its desired information from the composite signal, which consists of a distorted version of the desired signal, interference from neighboring cells and additive white Gaussian noise. Waveform distortion is caused by time and frequency selective linear time-variant channel that exists between every transmitter-receiver pair. Under such system and design constraints, and a fixed bandwidth for the entire network, we show that the most efficient resource allocation policy for each transmitter based on information theoretic measures such as channel capacity, simultaneously achievable rate regions and sum-rate is superposition coding with successive interference cancellation. The optimal policy dominates over its sub-optimal alternatives at the boundaries of the capacity region. By taking into account practical constraints such as finite constellation sets, frequency translation via carrier modulation, pulse shaping and real-time signal processing and decoding of finite-length waveforms and fairness in rate distribution, we argue that sub-optimal orthogonal policies are preferred. For intra-cell multiplexing, all orthogonal schemes based on frequency, time and code division are equivalent. For inter-cell multiplexing, non-orthogonal code-division has a larger capacity than its orthogonalby Ceilidh Hoffmann.Ph.D

    The Telecommunications and Data Acquisition Report

    Get PDF
    Deep Space Network (DSN) progress in flight project support, tracking and data acquisition research and technology, network engineering, hardware and software implementation, and operation is discussed. In addition, developments in Earth-based radio technology as applied to geodynamics, astrophysics and the radio search for extraterrestrial intelligence are reported

    Foundations of Software Science and Computation Structures

    Get PDF
    This open access book constitutes the proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Foundations of Software Science and Computational Structures, FOSSACS 2022, which was held during April 4-6, 2022, in Munich, Germany, as part of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2022. The 23 regular papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 77 submissions. They deal with research on theories and methods to support the analysis, integration, synthesis, transformation, and verification of programs and software systems

    Computer Science for Continuous Data:Survey, Vision, Theory, and Practice of a Computer Analysis System

    Get PDF
    Building on George Boole's work, Logic provides a rigorous foundation for the powerful tools in Computer Science that underlie nowadays ubiquitous processing of discrete data, such as strings or graphs. Concerning continuous data, already Alan Turing had applied "his" machines to formalize and study the processing of real numbers: an aspect of his oeuvre that we transform from theory to practice.The present essay surveys the state of the art and envisions the future of Computer Science for continuous data: natively, beyond brute-force discretization, based on and guided by and extending classical discrete Computer Science, as bridge between Pure and Applied Mathematics

    Foundations of Software Science and Computation Structures

    Get PDF
    This open access book constitutes the proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Foundations of Software Science and Computational Structures, FOSSACS 2022, which was held during April 4-6, 2022, in Munich, Germany, as part of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2022. The 23 regular papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 77 submissions. They deal with research on theories and methods to support the analysis, integration, synthesis, transformation, and verification of programs and software systems
    corecore