9,463 research outputs found
Spectral and Energy Efficiency of Superimposed Pilots in Uplink Massive MIMO
Next generation wireless networks aim at providing substantial improvements
in spectral efficiency (SE) and energy efficiency (EE). Massive MIMO has been
proved to be a viable technology to achieve these goals by spatially
multiplexing several users using many base station (BS) antennas. A potential
limitation of Massive MIMO in multicell systems is pilot contamination, which
arises in the channel estimation process from the interference caused by
reusing pilots in neighboring cells. A standard method to reduce pilot
contamination, known as regular pilot (RP), is to adjust the length of pilot
sequences while transmitting data and pilot symbols disjointly. An alternative
method, called superimposed pilot (SP), sends a superposition of pilot and data
symbols. This allows to use longer pilots which, in turn, reduces pilot
contamination. We consider the uplink of a multicell Massive MIMO network using
maximum ratio combining detection and compare RP and SP in terms of SE and EE.
To this end, we derive rigorous closed-form achievable rates with SP under a
practical random BS deployment. We prove that the reduction of pilot
contamination with SP is outweighed by the additional coherent and non-coherent
interference. Numerical results show that when both methods are optimized, RP
achieves comparable SE and EE to SP in practical scenarios.Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables. Submitted in March 2017 to IEEE
Transactions on Wireless Communication
Clumping factors of HII, HeII and HeIII
Estimating the intergalactic medium ionization level of a region needs proper
treatment of the reionization process for a large representative volume of the
universe. The clumping factor, a parameter which accounts for the effect of
recombinations in unresolved, small-scale structures, aids in achieving the
required accuracy for the reionization history even in simulations with low
spatial resolution.
In this paper, we study for the first time the redshift evolution of clumping
factors of different ionized species of H and He in a small but very high
resolution simulation of the reionization process. We investigate the
dependence of the value and redshift evolution of clumping factors on their
definition, the ionization level of the gas, the grid resolution, box size and
mean dimensionless density of the simulations.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 1 table. Accepted by MNRA
Discrete structure of the brain rhythms
Neuronal activity in the brain generates synchronous oscillations of the
Local Field Potential (LFP). The traditional analyses of the LFPs are based on
decomposing the signal into simpler components, such as sinusoidal harmonics.
However, a common drawback of such methods is that the decomposition primitives
are usually presumed from the onset, which may bias our understanding of the
signal's structure. Here, we introduce an alternative approach that allows an
impartial, high resolution, hands-off decomposition of the brain waves into a
small number of discrete, frequency-modulated oscillatory processes, which we
call oscillons. In particular, we demonstrate that mouse hippocampal LFP
contain a single oscillon that occupies the -frequency band and a
couple of -oscillons that correspond, respectively, to slow and fast
-waves. Since the oscillons were identified empirically, they may
represent the actual, physical structure of synchronous oscillations in
neuronal ensembles, whereas Fourier-defined "brain waves" are nothing but
poorly resolved oscillons.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
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