136 research outputs found
Cooperative Diversity and Partner Selection in Wireless Networks
Next generation wireless communication systems are expected to provide a variety
of services including voice, data and video. The rapidly growing demand for these services
needs high data rate wireless communication systems with reliability and high user
capacity. Recently, it has been shown that reliability and achievable data rate of wireless communication systems increases dramatically by employing multiple transmit and receive antennas. Transmit diversity is a powerful technique for combating multipath
fading in wireless communications. However, employing multiple antennas in a mobile
terminal to achieve the transmit diversity in the uplink is not feasible due to the limited
size of the mobile unit.
In order to overcome this problem, a new mode of transmit diversity called cooperative
diversity (CD) based on user cooperation, was proposed very recently. By user cooperation, it is meant that the sender transmits to the destination and copies to other users, called partners, for relaying to the destination. The antennas of the sender and the partners together form a multiple antenna situation. CD systems are immuned not only against small scale channel fading but also against large scale channel fading. On the other hand, CD systems are more sensitive to interuser (between sender and partner) transmission errors and user mobility.
In this dissertation, we propose a bandwidth and power efficient CD system which could be accommodated with minimal modifications in the currently available direct or
point-to-point communication systems. The proposed CD system is based on quadrature
signaling (QS). With quadrature signaling, both senderâs and partnersâ information
symbols are transmitted simultaneously in his/her multiple access channels. It also reduces the synchronization as well as the interference problems that occur in the schemes reported in the literature.
The performance of the proposed QS-CD system is analyzed at different layers. First, we study the bit error probability (BEP) of the QS-CD system for both fixed and adaptive
relaying at the partner. It is shown from the BEP performance that the QS-CD system can
achieve diversity order of two. Then, a cross-layer communication system is developed
by combing the proposed QS-CD system at the physical layer and the truncated stop-and-
wait automatic repeat request (ARQ) at the data link layer. The performance of the cross-layer system is analyzed and compared with existing schemes in the literature
for performance metrics at the data link layer and upper layers, i.e., frame error rate, packet loss rate, average packet delay, throughput, etc. In addition, the studies show that the proposed QS-CD-ARQ system outperforms existing schemes when it has a good partner. In this respect, the proposed system is fully utilizing the communication channel and less complex in terms of implementation when compared with the existing systems.
Since the partner selection gives significant impact on the performance of the CD systems, partner selection algorithms (PSAs) are extensively analyzed for both static and
mobile user network. In this case, each individual user would like to take advantage
of cooperation by choosing a suitable partner. The objective of an individual user may conflict with the objective of the network. In this regard, we would like to introduce a PSA which tries to balance both users and network objectives by taking user mobility into consideration. The proposed PSA referred to as worst link first (WLF), to choose the best partner in cooperative communication systems. The WLF algorithm gives priority to the worst link user to choose its partner and to maximize the energy gain of the radio cell. It is easy to implement not only in centralized networks but also in distributed networks with or without the global knowledge of users in the network. The proposed WLF matching algorithm, being less complex than the optimal maximum weighted (MW) matching and the heuristic based Greedy matching algorithms, yields performance characteristics close to those of MW matching algorithm and better than the Greedy matching algorithm in both static and mobile user networks. Furthermore, the proposed matching algorithm provides around 10dB energy gain with optimal power allocation over a non-cooperative system which is equivalent to prolonging the cell phone battery recharge time by about ten times
Imprint of past and present environmental conditions on microbiology and biogeochemistry of coastal Quaternary sediments
To date, North Sea tidal-flat sediments have been intensively studied down to a depth of 5 m below seafloor (mbsf). However, little is known about the biogeochemistry, microbial abundance, and activity of sulfate reducers as well as methanogens in deeper layers. In this study, two 20 m-long cores were retrieved from the tidal-flat area of Spiekeroog Island, NW Germany. The drill sites were selected with a close distance of 900 m allowing to compare two depositional settings: first, a paleo-channel filled with Holocene sediments and second, a mainly Pleistocene sedimentary succession. Analyzing these cores, we wanted to test to which degree the paleo-environmental imprint is superimposed by present processes. <br><br> In general, the numbers of bacterial 16S rRNA genes are one to two orders of magnitude higher than those of <i>Archaea</i>. The abundances of key genes for sulfate reduction and methanogenesis (<i>dsr</i>A and <i>mcr</i>A) correspond to the sulfate and methane profiles. A co-variance of these key genes at sulfate-methane interfaces and enhanced ex situ AOM rates suggest that anaerobic oxidation of methane may occur in these layers. Microbial and biogeochemical profiles are vertically stretched relative to 5 m-deep cores from shallower sediments in the same study area, but still appear compressed compared to deep sea sediments. Our interdisciplinary analysis shows that the microbial abundances and metabolic rates are elevated in the Holocene compared to Pleistocene sediments. However, this is mainly due to present environmental conditions such as pore water flow and organic matter availability. The paleo-environmental imprint is still visible but superimposed by these processes
Spatial and temporal patterns of pore water chemistry in the inter-tidal zone of a high energy beach
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is a ubiquitous source of meteoric fresh groundwater and recirculating seawater to the coastal ocean. Due to the hidden distribution of SGD, as well as the hydraulic- and stratigraphy-driven spatial and temporal heterogeneities, one of the biggest challenges to date is the correct assessment of SGD-driven constituent fluxes. Here, we present results from a 3-dimensional seasonal sampling campaign of a shallow subterranean estuary in a high-energy, meso-tidal beach, Spiekeroog Island, Northern Germany. We determined beach topography and analyzed physico-chemical and biogeochemical parameters such as salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen, Fe(II) and dissolved organic matter fluorescence (FDOM). Overall, the highest gradients in pore water chemistry were found in the cross-shore direction. In particular, a strong physico-chemical differentiation between the tidal high water and low water line was found and reflected relatively stable in- and exfiltrating conditions in these areas. Contrastingly, in between, the pore water compositions in the existing foreshore ridge and runnel system were very heterogeneous on a spatial and temporal scale. The reasons for this observation may be the strong morphological changes that occur throughout the entire year, which affect the exact locations and heights of the ridge and runnel structures and associated flow paths. Further, seasonal changes in temperature and inland hydraulic head, and the associated effect on microbial mediated redox reactions likely overprint these patterns. In the long-shore direction the pore water chemistry varied less than the along the cross-shore direction. Variation in long-shore direction was probably occurring due to topography changes of the ridge-runnel structure and a physical heterogeneity of the sediment, which produced non-uniform groundwater flow conditions. We conclude that on meso-tidal high energy beaches, the rapidly changing beach morphology produces zones with different approximations to steady-state conditions. Therefore, we suggest that zone-specific endmember sampling is the optimal strategy to reduce uncertainties of SGD-driven constituent fluxes
A 26 million year gap in the central Arctic record at the greenhouse-icehouse transition: Looking for clues
The Cenozoic record of the Lomonosov Ridge (central Arctic Ocean) recovered during Integrated Ocean
Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 302 revealed an unexpected 26 Ma hiatus, separating middle Eocene
(ïżœ44.4 Ma) from lower Miocene sediments (ïżœ18.2 Ma). To elucidate the nature of this unconformity, we
performed a multiproxy palynological (dinoflagellate cysts, pollen, and spores), micropaleontological
(siliceous microfossils), inorganic, and organic (Tetra Ether Index of lipids with 86 carbon atoms (TEX86)
and Branched and Isoprenoid Tetraether (BIT)) geochemical analysis of the sediments from ïżœ5 m below to
ïżœ7 m above the hiatus. Four main paleoenvironmental phases (AâD) are recognized in the sediments
encompassing the unconformity, two below (AâB) and two above (CâD): (A) Below the hiatus, proxies show
relatively warm temperatures, with Sea Surface Temperatures (TEX86-derived SSTs) of about 8ïżœC and high
fresh to brackish water influence. (B) Approaching the hiatus, proxies indicate a cooling trend (TEX86-derived
SSTs of ïżœ5ïżœC), increased freshwater influence, and progressive shoaling of the Lomonosov Ridge drilling
site, located close to or at sea level. (C) The interval directly above the unconformity contains sparse reworked
Cretaceous to Oligocene dinoflagellate cysts. Sediments were deposited in a relatively shallow, restricted
marine environment. Proxies show the simultaneous influence of both fresh and marine waters, with
alternating oxic and anoxic conditions. Pollen indicates a relatively cold climate. Intriguingly, TEX86-derived
SSTs are unexpectedly high, ïżœ15â19ïżœC. Such warm surface waters may be partially explained by the
ingression of warmer North Atlantic waters after the opening of the Fram Strait during the early Miocene. (D)
Sediments of the uppermost interval indicate a phase of extreme oxic conditions, and a well-ventilated
environment, which occurred after the complete opening of the Fram Strait. Importantly, and in contrast with
classical postrifting thermal subsidence models for passive margins, our data suggest that sediment erosion
and/or nondeposition that generated the hiatus was likely due to a progressive shoaling of the Lomonosov
Ridge. A shallow water setting both before and after the hiatus suggests that the Lomonosov Ridge remained
at or near sea level for the duration of the gap in the sedimentary record. Interacting sea level changes and/or
tectonic activity (possibly uplift) must be invoked as possible causes for such a long hiatus
Mid-Cenozoic tectonic and paleoenvironmental setting of the central Arctic Ocean
Drilling results from the Integrated Ocean Drilling Programâs Arctic Coring Expedition (ACEX) to the
Lomonosov Ridge (LR) document a 26 million year hiatus that separates freshwater-influenced biosilica-rich
deposits of the middle Eocene from fossil-poor glaciomarine silty clays of the early Miocene. Detailed
micropaleontological and sedimentological data from sediments surrounding this mid-Cenozoic hiatus describe
a shallow water setting for the LR, a finding that conflicts with predrilling seismic predictions and an initial
postcruise assessment of its subsidence history that assumed smooth thermally controlled subsidence following
rifting. A review of Cenozoic tectonic processes affecting the geodynamic evolution of the central Arctic Ocean
highlights a prolonged phase of basin-wide compression that ended in the early Miocene. The coincidence in
timing between the end of compression and the start of rapid early Miocene subsidence provides a compelling
link between these observations and similarly accounts for the shallow water setting that persisted more than
30 million years after rifting ended. However, for much of the late Paleogene and early Neogene, tectonic
reconstructions of the Arctic Ocean describe a landlocked basin, adding additional uncertainty to reconstructions
of paleodepth estimates as the magnitude of regional sea level variations remains unknown
Evolution of the Southwest Australian Rifted Continental Margin During Breakup of East Gondwana: Results from IODP Expedition 369
International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 369 drilled four sites on the southwestern Australian continental margin, in the deep water Mentelle Basin (MB) and on the neighboring Naturaliste Plateau (NP). The drillsites are located on continental crust that continued rifting after seafloor spreading began further north on the Perth Abyssal Plain (PAP) between magnetochrons M11r and M11n (133â132 Ma), ending when spreading began west of the NP between chrons M5n and M3n (126â124 Ma). Drilling recovered the first inâsitu samples of basalt flows overlying the breakup unconformity on the NP, establishing a magnetostratigraphically constrained eruption age of >131â133 Ma and confirming a minimal late Valanginian age for the breakup unconformity (coeval with the onset of PAP seafloor spreading). Petrogenetic modeling indicates the basalts were generated by 25% melting at 1.5 GPa and a potential temperature of 1380â1410 °C, consistent with proximity of the Kerguelen plume during breakup. Benthic foraminiferal fossils indicate that the NP remained at upper bathyal or shallower depths during the last 6 Myr of rifting and for 3â5 Myr after breakup between India and Australia. The limited subsidence is attributed to heat from the nearby Kerguelen plume and PAP spreading ridge. The margin subsided to middle bathyal depths by Albian time and to lower bathyal (NP) or greater (MB) depths by late Paleogene time. Periods of rapid sedimentation accompanied a westward jump of the PAP spreading ridge (108 Ma), rifting on the southern margin (100â84 Ma), and opening of the southern seaway between Australia and Antarctica (60â47 Ma)
Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Pore Water Chemistry in the Inter-Tidal Zone of a High Energy Beach
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is a ubiquitous source of meteoric fresh groundwater and recirculating seawater to the coastal ocean. Due to the hidden distribution of SGD, as well as the hydraulic- and stratigraphy-driven spatial and temporal heterogeneities, one of the biggest challenges to date is the correct assessment of SGD-driven constituent fluxes. Here, we present results from a 3-dimensional seasonal sampling campaign of a shallow subterranean estuary in a high-energy, meso-tidal beach, Spiekeroog Island, Northern Germany. We determined beach topography and analyzed physico-chemical and biogeochemical parameters such as salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen, Fe(II) and dissolved organic matter fluorescence (FDOM). Overall, the highest gradients in pore water chemistry were found in the cross-shore direction. In particular, a strong physico-chemical differentiation between the tidal high water and low water line was found and reflected relatively stable in- and exfiltrating conditions in these areas. Contrastingly, in between, the pore water compositions in the existing foreshore ridge and runnel system were very heterogeneous on a spatial and temporal scale. The reasons for this observation may be the strong morphological changes that occur throughout the entire year, which affect the exact locations and heights of the ridge and runnel structures and associated flow paths. Further, seasonal changes in temperature and inland hydraulic head, and the associated effect on microbial mediated redox reactions likely overprint these patterns. In the long-shore direction the pore water chemistry varied less than the along the cross-shore direction. Variation in long-shore direction was probably occurring due to topography changes of the ridge-runnel structure and a physical heterogeneity of the sediment, which produced non-uniform groundwater flow conditions. We conclude that on meso-tidal high energy beaches, the rapidly changing beach morphology produces zones with different approximations to steady-state conditions. Therefore, we suggest that zone-specific endmember sampling is the optimal strategy to reduce uncertainties of SGD-driven constituent fluxes
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