24 research outputs found

    Indoor ultra-wideband channel modeling and localization using multipath estimation algorithms

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    Measurement-based analysis of delay-Doppler characteristics in an indoor environment

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    An analysis of delay-Doppler characteristics in the presence of moving people is presented for short-range communication in an indoor environment. Channel-sounding measurements have been carried out at 3.6 GHz in a crowded university hall during several short and long breaks in-between courses. During three consecutive days, the measurements were repeated with different positions for the transmit and receive antennas. In this study, the behavior of the maximum Doppler shift and the Doppler spread was analyzed in the time-delay domain as a function of the occupation of the hall, the polarizations of the 2 x 2 MIMO antennas, and their positions in the hall. The measurements reveal a clear distinction between the Doppler spread of the short and long breaks in the campaign, indicating a distinctive power distribution of their Doppler spectra. In addition, there is a significant contrast between the Doppler characteristics of the co- and cross-polarizations. Measurements at several positions reveal the importance of characterizing multipaths and show that the Doppler effect depends on the position of the antennas in the environment. In addition, this work also shows that the Doppler spectrum can be accurately modeled by a Cauchy distribution, allowing for the generation of parameters to describe Doppler characteristics

    Measurement-based analysis of Doppler characteristics for ultra-wideband radio channels in an office environment

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    In this work, an analysis of the Doppler characteristics for Ultra-Wideband indoor communication is presented. Channel sounding measurements ranging from 3.1 to 10.6 GHz were performed over the course of several days in an occupied office environment, with the help of a network analyzer. Based on these measurements, we analyze the behavior of both the Doppler spread and RMS Doppler spread in the Ultra-Wideband frequency band. Our measurements indicate a frequency-dependent behavior for both parameters, where consistent values could be measured with respect to time of observation

    Polarization properties of specular and dense multipath components in a large industrial hall

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    This paper presents an analysis of the polarization characteristics of specular and dense multipath components (SMC & DMC) in a large industrial hall based on frequency-domain channel sounding experiments at 1.3 GHz with 22 MHz bandwidth. The RiMAX maximum-likelihood estimator is used to extract the full polarimetric SMC and DMC from the measurement data by taking into account the polarimetric radiating patterns of the dual-polarized antennas. Cross-polar discrimination (XPD) values are presented for the measured channels and for the SMC and DMC separately

    Hierarchical network-aware placement of service oriented applications in clouds

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    In cloud environments, resources can be requested on-demand when they are needed. A cloud management system is responsible for determining which physical machines are responsible for processing the requests. The problem of determining which servers are used for which services is referred to as the Cloud Application Placement Problem (CAPP), and multiple criteria such as cost and number of migrations must be taken into account. When applications are constructed as a collection of communicating services, such as in Service-Oriented Architectures, it becomes important to take the underlying network properties into account when these placement decisions are made. In this paper, we propose an Integer Linear Programming (ILP) formulation for the CAPP, which optimizes multiple criteria such as cost, latency and number of migrations between subsequent invocations by using multiple optimization criteria. We also present hierarchical algorithms based on particle swarm optimization and genetic algorithms to solve the CAPP. These algorithms are be executed within a management hierarchy, which reduces the amount of information needed for the algorithms to function, increasing scalability of the management system. Finally, we evaluate the hierarchical algorithms by comparing them to an optimal algorithm based on the ILP formulation

    An indoor variance-based localization technique utilizing the UWB estimation of geometrical propagation parameters

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    A novel localization framework is presented based on ultra-wideband (UWB) channel sounding, employing a triangulation method using the geometrical properties of propagation paths, such as time delay of arrival, angle of departure, angle of arrival, and their estimated variances. In order to extract these parameters from the UWB sounding data, an extension to the high-resolution RiMAX algorithm was developed, facilitating the analysis of these frequency-dependent multipath parameters. This framework was then tested by performing indoor measurements with a vector network analyzer and virtual antenna arrays. The estimated means and variances of these geometrical parameters were utilized to generate multiple sample sets of input values for our localization framework. Next to that, we consider the existence of multiple possible target locations, which were subsequently clustered using a Kim-Parks algorithm, resulting in a more robust estimation of each target node. Measurements reveal that our newly proposed technique achieves an average accuracy of 0.26, 0.28, and 0.90 m in line-of-sight (LoS), obstructed-LoS, and non-LoS scenarios, respectively, and this with only one single beacon node. Moreover, utilizing the estimated variances of the multipath parameters proved to enhance the location estimation significantly compared to only utilizing their estimated mean values

    Measurement-based analysis of dense multipath components in a large industrial warehouse

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    This work presents a measurement-based polarimetric analysis of the specular- and dense multipath components (SMCs and DMC) in a large industrial warehouse. MIMO channel sounding measurements were carried out in a flower auction warehouse, and were processed with the RiMAX multipath estimation framework. In the analysis, we investigate the behavior of the SMCs and the DMC power as a function of both the polarization and the transmitter-receiver distance for 1507 distinct positions of the receiver. The cross-polar discrimination of the transmitted V and H polarizations were analyzed statistically for this environment, as well as the relative power ratio of the DMC, and the DMC reverberation time

    An extension of the RiMAX multipath estimation algorithm for ultra-wideband channel modeling

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    This work presents an extension of the high-resolution RiMAX multipath estimation algorithm, enabling the analysis of frequency-dependent propagation parameters for ultra-wideband (UWB) channel modeling. Since RiMAX is a narrowband algorithm, it does not account for the frequency-dependency of the radio channel or the environment. As such, the impact of certain materials in which these systems operate can no longer be considered constant with respect to frequency, preventing an accurate estimation of multipath parameters for UWB communication. In order to track both the specular and dense multipath components (SMC and DMC) over frequency, an extension to the RiMAX algorithm was developed that can process UWB measurement data. The advantage of our approach is that geometrical propagation parameters do not appear or disappear from one sub-band onto the next. The UWB-RiMAX algorithm makes it possible to re-evaluate common radio channel parameters for DMC in the wideband scenario, and to extend the well-known deterministic propagation model comprising of SMC alone, towards a more hybrid model containing the stochastic contributions from the DMC's distributed diffuse scattering as well. Our algorithm was tested with synthetic radio channel models in an indoor environment, which show that our algorithm can match up to 99% of the SMC parameters according to the multipath component distance (MCD) metric and that the DMC reverberation time known from the theory of room electromagnetics can be estimated on average with an error margin of less than 2 ns throughout the UWB frequency band. We also present some preliminary results in an indoor environment, which indicate a strong presence of DMC and thus diffuse scattering. The DMC power represents up to 50% of the total measured power for the lower UWB frequencies and reduces to around 30% for the higher UWB frequencies
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