127 research outputs found
Measuring the complex orbital angular momentum spectrum and spatial mode decomposition of structured light beams
Light beams carrying orbital angular momentum are key resources in modern
photonics. In many applications, the ability of measuring the complex spectrum
of structured light beams in terms of these fundamental modes is crucial. Here
we propose and experimentally validate a simple method that achieves this goal
by digital analysis of the interference pattern formed by the light beam and a
reference field. Our approach allows one to characterize the beam radial
distribution also, hence retrieving the entire information contained in the
optical field. Setup simplicity and reduced number of measurements could make
this approach practical and convenient for the characterization of structured
light fields.Comment: 8 pages (including Methods and References), 6 figure
Single and Multiple Scattering in UWB Bicone Arrays
An analysis of interactions between radiators in a UWB biconical array, drawing attention to single and multiple scatterings, is carried out. The complementarity between electrical coupling and radiation scattering is argued. The point source approximation is discussed and shown to be insufficient. An approximation of radiation scattering based on angular averaging of the scattering coefficient is proposed. This approach yields a reduction of the problem complexity, which is especially interesting in UWB multiple antenna systems, because of the large bandwidth. Multiple scattering between radiators is shown to be a second-order effect. Finally, a time domain approach is used in order to investigate pulse distortion and quantify the exactness of the proposed scattering model
Millimeter-wave backscattering measurements with transmitarrays for personal radar applications
The concept of personal radar has recently emerged as an interesting solution for next 5G applications. In fact the high portability of massive antenna arrays at millimeter-waves enables the integration of a radar system in pocket-size devices (i.e. tablets or smartphones) and enhances the possibility to map the surrounding environment by guaranteeing accurate localization together with high-speed communication capabilities. In this paper we investigate for the first time the capability of such personal radar solution using real measured data collected at millimeter-waves as input for the mapping algorithm
Application of transmitarray antennas for indoor mapping at millimeter-waves
Millimeter-waves are expected to play a key role in next 5G scenario due to the availability of a large clean unlicensed bandwidth at 60 GHz and the possibility to realize packed antenna arrays, with a consequent increase of the communication capacity and the introduction of new functionalities, such as high-definition localization and personal radar for automatic environment mapping. In this paper we propose the adoption of millimeter-wave transmitarrays for personal radar applications and we investigate the impact of the radiation pattern characteristics on the map reconstruction accuracy, by analysing how the number of array elements, of quantization bits and the focal distance affect the environment reconstruction performance
On the Frequency Dependency of Radio Channel's Delay Spread: Analyses and Findings From mmMAGIC Multi-frequency Channel Sounding
This paper analyzes the frequency dependency of the radio propagation
channel's root mean square (rms) delay spread (DS), based on the
multi-frequency measurement campaigns in the mmMAGIC project. The campaigns
cover indoor, outdoor, and outdoor-to-indoor (O2I) scenarios and a wide
frequency range from 2 to 86 GHz. Several requirements have been identified
that define the parameters which need to be aligned in order to make a
reasonable comparison among the different channel sounders employed for this
study. A new modelling approach enabling the evaluation of the statistical
significance of the model parameters from different measurements and the
establishment of a unified model is proposed. After careful analysis, the
conclusion is that any frequency trend of the DS is small considering its
confidence intervals. There is statistically significant difference from the
3GPP New Radio (NR) model TR 38.901, except for the O2I scenario.Comment: This paper has been accepted to the 2018 12th European Conference on
Antennas and Propagation (EuCAP), London, UK, April 201
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