35 research outputs found
Investigation of the STEWARD Expert system for the Lake Pittsfield watershed
"Prepared for the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.""December 1998."Includes bibliographical references (p. 31-32)
Smooth Phase Interpolated Keying
Smooth phase interpolated keying (SPIK) is an improved method of computing smooth phase-modulation waveforms for radio communication systems that convey digital information. SPIK is applicable to a variety of phase-shift-keying (PSK) modulation schemes, including quaternary PSK (QPSK), octonary PSK (8PSK), and 16PSK. In comparison with a related prior method, SPIK offers advantages of better performance and less complexity of implementation. In a PSK scheme, the underlying information waveform that one seeks to convey consists of discrete rectangular steps, but the spectral width of such a waveform is excessive for practical radio communication. Therefore, the problem is to smooth the step phase waveform in such a manner as to maintain power and bandwidth efficiency without incurring an unacceptably large error rate and without introducing undesired variations in the amplitude of the affected radio signal. Although the ideal constellation of PSK phasor points does not cause amplitude variations, filtering of the modulation waveform (in which, typically, a rectangular pulse is converted to a square-root raised cosine pulse) causes amplitude fluctuations. If a power-efficient nonlinear amplifier is used in the radio communication system, the fluctuating-amplitude signal can undergo significant spectral regrowth, thus compromising the bandwidth efficiency of the system. In the related prior method, one seeks to solve the problem in a procedure that comprises two major steps: phase-value generation and phase interpolation. SPIK follows the two-step approach of the related prior method, but the details of the steps are different. In the phase-value-generation step, the phase values of symbols in the PSK constellation are determined by a phase function that is said to be maximally smooth and that is chosen to minimize the spectral spread of the modulated signal. In this step, the constellation is divided into two groups by assigning, to information symbols, phase values that result in equal numbers of clockwise and counter-clockwise phase rotations for equally likely symbols. The purpose served by assigning phase values in this way is to prevent unnecessary generation of spectral lines and prevent net shifts of the carrier signal. In the phase-interpolation step, the smooth phase values are interpolated over a number, n, of consecutive symbols (including the present symbol) by means of an unconventional spline curve fit
Hydrologic modeling of the Court Creek Watershed
"Contract Report 2000-04.""March 2000.""IDNR Contract number G99C0230.
Water quality evaluations for Lake Springfield and proposed Hunter Lake and proposed Lick Creek Reservoir
"Prepared for the City of Springfield.""December 1977."Includes bibliographical references
Review of hydrologic and hydraulic studies and unsteady flow routing of the 1993 flood in the Upper Mississippi River system
"December 1997.""A division of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
Modeling the Lake Pittsfield watershed using the AGNPS-ARC/INFO model
"December 1998.""Contract report 640.""Prepared for the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.""Financial assistance grant no. 94-25-0 & 96-11.
Dynamic modeling and monitoring of water, sediment, nutrients, and pesticides in agricultural watersheds during storm events
"September 1999.""Prepared for the Illinois Groundwater Consortium, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.""Subcontract numbers 97-03 & 98-06, Project numbers 1-5-28718 & 1-5-28923.""Contract report 655"--Cover
A review of communication-oriented optical wireless systems
This article presents an overview of optical wireless (OW) communication systems that operate both in the short-
(personal and indoor systems) and the long-range (outdoor and hybrid) regimes. Each of these areas is discussed
in terms of (a) key requirements, (b) their application framework, (c) major impairments and applicable mitigation
techniques, and (d) current and/or future trends. Personal communication systems are discussed within the context
of point-to-point ultra-high speed data transfer. The most relevant application framework and related standards are
presented, including the next generation Giga-IR standard that extends personal communication speeds to over 1
Gb/s. As far as indoor systems are concerned, emphasis is given on modeling the dispersive nature of indoor OW
channels, on the limitations that dispersion imposes on user mobility and dispersion mitigation techniques. Visible
light communication systems, which provide both illumination and communication over visible or hybrid visible/
infrared LEDs, are presented as the most important representative of future indoor OW systems. The discussion on
outdoor systems focuses on the impact of atmospheric effects on the optical channel and associated mitigation
techniques that extend the realizable link lengths and transfer rates. Currently, outdoor OW is commercially
available at 10 Gb/s Ethernet speeds for Metro networks and Local-Area-Network interconnections and speeds are
expected to increase as faster and more reliable optical components become available. This article concludes with
hybrid optical wireless/radio-frequency (OW/RF) systems that employ an additional RF link to improve the overall
system reliability. Emphasis is given on cooperation techniques between the reliable RF subsystem and the
broadband OW system