55 research outputs found
OFDM Wireless Optical Communication Systems with Serial Relays Over Exponentially Modeled Turbulence Channels
The optical wireless communication systems attract very significant research and commercial interest, the last years, due to their high availability, and performance characteristics with relatively low installation and operational cost. On the other hand, due to the fact that the optical channel which is used in this technology is the atmosphere, their performance depends strongly on the atmospheric conditions and the link’s characteristics. Thus, the effective distance that these systems can cover is relatively short. Thus, in many cases where the long distance signal propagation using wireless optical systems, is necessary, relay nodes are used. In this work, we study the performance of a wireless optical system, which is using the orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) technique and relay nodes which decode and retransmit the received signal, over atmospheric turbulence channels modeled with the negative exponential distribution. For this system, we derive closed form mathematical expressions for its outage probability and average bit error rate (BER). Finally, we present the corresponding numerical results for realistic cases with common parameter values
State–of–the–art report on nonlinear representation of sources and channels
This report consists of two complementary parts, related to the modeling of two important sources of nonlinearities in a communications system. In the first part, an overview of important past work related to the estimation, compression and processing of sparse data through the use of nonlinear models is provided. In the second part, the current state of the art on the representation of wireless channels in the presence of nonlinearities is summarized. In addition to the characteristics of the nonlinear wireless fading channel, some information is also provided on recent approaches to the sparse representation of such channels
Performance analysis of packet layer FEC codes and interleaving in FSO channels
The combination of forward-error-correction (FEC) and interleaving can be used to improve free-space optical (FSO) communication systems. Recent research has optimized the codeword length and interleaving depth under the assumption of a fixed buffering size, however, how the buffering size influences the system performance remains unsolved. This paper models the system performance as a function of buffering size and FEC recovery threshold, which allows system designers to determine optimum parameters in consideration of the overhead. The modelling is based on statistics of temporal features of correct data reception and burst error length through the measurement of the channel good time and outage time. The experimental results show good coherence with the theoretical values. This method can also be applied in other channels if a Continuous-Time-Markov-Chain (CTMC) model of the channel can be derive
Search for the Proton Decay Mode proton to neutrino K+ in Soudan 2
We have searched for the proton decay mode proton to neutrino K+ using the
one-kiloton Soudan 2 high resolution calorimeter. Contained events obtained
from a 3.56 kiloton-year fiducial exposure through June 1997 are examined for
occurrence of a visible K+ track which decays at rest into mu+ nu or pi+ pi0.
We found one candidate event consistent with background, yielding a limit,
tau/B > 4.3 10^{31} years at 90% CL with no background subtraction.Comment: 13 pages, Latex, 3 tables and 3 figures, Accepted by Physics Letters
Search for Nucleon Decay with Final States l+ eta, nubar eta, and nubar pi+,0 Using Soudan 2
We have searched for nucleon decay into five two-body final states using a
4.4 kiloton-year fiducial exposure of the Soudan 2 iron tracking calorimeter.
For proton decay into the fully visible final states mu+ eta and e+ eta, we
observe zero and one event, respectively, that satisfy our search criteria for
nucleon decay. The lifetime lower limits (tau/B) thus implied are 89 x 10^30
years and 81 x 10^30 years at 90% confidence level. For neutron decay into
nubar eta, we obtain the lifetime lower limit 71 x 10^30 years. Limits are also
reported for neutron decay into nubar pi0, and for proton decay into nubar pi+.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, 3 table
A Study of the Atmospheric Neutrino Flavour Content using the Soudan 2 Detector
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:D198151 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
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