93,231 research outputs found

    All-Digital Self-interference Cancellation Technique for Full-duplex Systems

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    Full-duplex systems are expected to double the spectral efficiency compared to conventional half-duplex systems if the self-interference signal can be significantly mitigated. Digital cancellation is one of the lowest complexity self-interference cancellation techniques in full-duplex systems. However, its mitigation capability is very limited, mainly due to transmitter and receiver circuit's impairments. In this paper, we propose a novel digital self-interference cancellation technique for full-duplex systems. The proposed technique is shown to significantly mitigate the self-interference signal as well as the associated transmitter and receiver impairments. In the proposed technique, an auxiliary receiver chain is used to obtain a digital-domain copy of the transmitted Radio Frequency (RF) self-interference signal. The self-interference copy is then used in the digital-domain to cancel out both the self-interference signal and the associated impairments. Furthermore, to alleviate the receiver phase noise effect, a common oscillator is shared between the auxiliary and ordinary receiver chains. A thorough analytical and numerical analysis for the effect of the transmitter and receiver impairments on the cancellation capability of the proposed technique is presented. Finally, the overall performance is numerically investigated showing that using the proposed technique, the self-interference signal could be mitigated to ~3dB higher than the receiver noise floor, which results in up to 76% rate improvement compared to conventional half-duplex systems at 20dBm transmit power values.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communication

    On Phase Noise Suppression in Full-Duplex Systems

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    Oscillator phase noise has been shown to be one of the main performance limiting factors in full-duplex systems. In this paper, we consider the problem of self-interference cancellation with phase noise suppression in full-duplex systems. The feasibility of performing phase noise suppression in full-duplex systems in terms of both complexity and achieved gain is analytically and experimentally investigated. First, the effect of phase noise on full-duplex systems and the possibility of performing phase noise suppression are studied. Two different phase noise suppression techniques with a detailed complexity analysis are then proposed. For each suppression technique, both free-running and phase locked loop based oscillators are considered. Due to the fact that full-duplex system performance highly depends on hardware impairments, experimental analysis is essential for reliable results. In this paper, the performance of the proposed techniques is experimentally investigated in a typical indoor environment. The experimental results are shown to confirm the results obtained from numerical simulations on two different experimental research platforms. At the end, the tradeoff between the required complexity and the gain achieved using phase noise suppression is discussed.Comment: Published in IEEE transactions on wireless communications on October-2014. Please refer to the IEEE version for the most updated documen

    Azimuthal anisotropy (v2v_{2}) of high-pT_{T} Ο€0\pi^{0} and direct Ξ³\gamma in Au+Au collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 GeV

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    Preliminary results from the STAR collaboration of the azimuthal anisotropy (v2)(v_{2}) of Ο€0\pi^{0} and direct photon (Ξ³dir\gamma_{dir}) at high transverse momentum (pT_{T}) from Au+Au collisions at center-of-mass energy sNN=200\sqrt{s_{_{NN}}}=200~GeV are presented. A shower-shape analysis is used to select a sample free of direct photons (Ο€0\pi^0) and a sample rich in direct photons Ξ³rich\gamma_{rich}. The relative contribution of background in the Ξ³rich\gamma_{rich} sample is determined assuming no associated charged particles nearby Ξ³dir\gamma_{dir}. The v2v_{2} of direct photons (v2Ξ³dirv_{2}^{\gamma_{dir}}) at mid-rapidity (∣ηγdir∣<1|\eta^{\gamma_{dir}}|<1) and high pT_{T} (8<pTΞ³dir<168< p_{T}^{\gamma_{dir}}<16~GeV/cc) is extracted from those of Ο€0\pi^{0} and neutral particles measured in the same kinematic range. In mid-central Au+Au collisions (10-40%\%), the v2v_{2} of Ο€0\pi^0 (v2Ο€0(pT)v_{2}^{\pi^{0}}(p_{T})) and charged particles (v2ch(pT)v_{2}^{ch}(p_{T})) are found to be ∼\sim 0.12 and nearly independent of pT_{T}. The measured v2Ξ³dir(pT)v_{2}^{\gamma_{dir}}(p_{T}) is positive finite and systematically smaller than that of Ο€0\pi^{0} and charged particles by a factor of ∼\sim 3. Although the large v2Ο€0v_{2}^{\pi^{0}} at such high pT_{T} might be partially due to the path-length dependence of energy loss, the non-zero value of v2Ξ³dirv_{2}^{\gamma_{dir}} indicates a bias of the reaction plane determination due to the presence of jets in the events. Systematic studies are currently in progress.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Hot Quarks 2010, LaLonde Franc

    On f(R) theories in two-dimensional spacetime

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    In recent years, theories in which the Einstien-Hilbert lagrangian is replaced by a function f(R) of the Ricci Scalar have been extensively studied in four-dimensional spacetime. In this work we carry out an analysis of such theories in two-dimensional spacetime with focus on cosmological implications. Solutions to the cosmological field equations are obtained and their properties are analysed. Inflationary solutions are also obtained and discussed. Quantization is then carried out, the Wheeler-DeWitt equation is set up and its exact solutions obtained

    Management of wetland resources in the lower Mekong Basin: issues and future directions

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    The Lower Mekong Basin has extensive wetlands and these are being threatened by numerous problems. Most of these problems are interdependent and interact with one another. The lack of an appropriate definition of wetlands applicable to the region, pervasive inefficiencies and chronic lack of funds among riparian governments, and the poor appreciation of the true economic importance of wetlands and its resources are among the most prominent. The current definition, based on the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar, Iran, 1971), is too broad when compared to the understanding of wetlands as being swamps, marshes and the like, and was developed specifically for wetlands with international importance as waterfowl habitats. Furthermore, wetlands are composed of different types of resources, which require different modes of management. Often, institutional competition, overlapping mandates and sometimes jealousies occur between government departments when they try to assert their authority on a particular wetland resource and use, and put forward their development plans without considering how these may conflict with other wetlands uses. Finally, effective wetland management requires reliable statistics or information on rate of harvest of natural resources such as fish and others, fishing/harvesting methods over time in order to determine the level of exploitation, and the status of the natural resources. This information is needed to identify opportunities for expansion, to establish historical trends, and to determine when management interventions are necessary to protect the resources from being overused by other developments. In order to address these issues, ICLARM - The World Fish Center has launched a project, the aim of objectives of which are described in this paper
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