5,171 research outputs found
Advanced probabilistic methods for quantifying the effects of various uncertainties in structural response
The effects of actual variations, also called uncertainties, in geometry and material properties on the structural response of a space shuttle main engine turbopump blade are evaluated. A normal distribution was assumed to represent the uncertainties statistically. Uncertainties were assumed to be totally random, partially correlated, and fully correlated. The magnitude of these uncertainties were represented in terms of mean and variance. Blade responses, recorded in terms of displacements, natural frequencies, and maximum stress, was evaluated and plotted in the form of probabilistic distributions under combined uncertainties. These distributions provide an estimate of the range of magnitudes of the response and probability of occurrence of a given response. Most importantly, these distributions provide the information needed to estimate quantitatively the risk in a structural design
Finite Blocklength Rates over a Fading Channel with CSIT and CSIR
In this work, we obtain lower and upper bounds on the maximal transmission
rate at a given codeword length , average probability of error
and power constraint , over a finite valued, block fading additive
white Gaussian noise (AWGN) channel with channel state information (CSI) at the
transmitter and the receiver. These bounds characterize deviation of the finite
blocklength coding rates from the channel capacity which is in turn achieved by
the water filling power allocation across time. The bounds obtained also
characterize the rate enhancement possible due to the CSI at the transmitter in
the finite blocklength regime. The results are further elucidated via numerical
examples.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, results for finite valued fading states, typos
corrected, proofs elaborated, lower bound under short term power constraint
improve
A Novel Algorithm for Cooperative Distributed Sequential Spectrum Sensing in Cognitive Radio
This paper considers cooperative spectrum sensing in Cognitive Radios. In our
previous work we have developed DualSPRT, a distributed algorithm for
cooperative spectrum sensing using Sequential Probability Ratio Test (SPRT) at
the Cognitive Radios as well as at the fusion center. This algorithm works
well, but is not optimal. In this paper we propose an improved algorithm-
SPRT-CSPRT, which is motivated from Cumulative Sum Procedures (CUSUM). We
analyse it theoretically. We also modify this algorithm to handle uncertainties
in SNR's and fading.Comment: This paper has been withdrawn by the author due to the submission of
detailed journal version of the same paper, to arXi
Distributed Nonparametric Sequential Spectrum Sensing under Electromagnetic Interference
A nonparametric distributed sequential algorithm for quick detection of
spectral holes in a Cognitive Radio set up is proposed. Two or more local nodes
make decisions and inform the fusion centre (FC) over a reporting Multiple
Access Channel (MAC), which then makes the final decision. The local nodes use
energy detection and the FC uses mean detection in the presence of fading,
heavy-tailed electromagnetic interference (EMI) and outliers. The statistics of
the primary signal, channel gain or the EMI is not known. Different
nonparametric sequential algorithms are compared to choose appropriate
algorithms to be used at the local nodes and the FC. Modification of a recently
developed random walk test is selected for the local nodes for energy detection
as well as at the fusion centre for mean detection. It is shown via simulations
and analysis that the nonparametric distributed algorithm developed performs
well in the presence of fading, EMI and is robust to outliers. The algorithm is
iterative in nature making the computation and storage requirements minimal.Comment: 8 pages; 6 figures; Version 2 has the proofs for the theorems.
Version 3 contains a new section on approximation analysi
A Distributed Scheduling Algorithm to Provide Quality-of-Service in Multihop Wireless Networks
Control of multihop Wireless networks in a distributed manner while providing
end-to-end delay requirements for different flows, is a challenging problem.
Using the notions of Draining Time and Discrete Review from the theory of fluid
limits of queues, an algorithm that meets delay requirements to various flows
in a network is constructed. The algorithm involves an optimization which is
implemented in a cyclic distributed manner across nodes by using the technique
of iterative gradient ascent, with minimal information exchange between nodes.
The algorithm uses time varying weights to give priority to flows. The
performance of the algorithm is studied in a network with interference modelled
by independent sets
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