744,782 research outputs found
Decoding: Codes and hardware implementation
The MST radars vary considerably from one installation to the next in the type of hardware, operating schedule and associated personnel. Most such systems do not have the computing power to decode in software when the decoding must be performed for each received pulse, as is required for certain sets of phase codes. These sets provide the best signal to sidelobe ratio when operating at the minimum band length allowed by the bandwidth of the transmitter. The development of the hardware phase decoder, and the applicability of each to decoding MST radar signals are discussed. A new design for a decoder which is very inexpensive to build, easy to add to an existing system and is capable of decoding on each received pulse using codes with a band length as short as one microsecond is presented
A reconfigurable frame interpolation hardware architecture for high definition video
Since Frame Rate Up-Conversion (FRC) is started to be used in recent consumer electronics products like High Definition TV, real-time and low cost implementation of FRC algorithms has become very important. Therefore, in this
paper, we propose a low cost hardware architecture for realtime implementation of frame interpolation algorithms. The proposed hardware architecture is reconfigurable and it allows adaptive selection of frame interpolation algorithms for each Macroblock. The proposed hardware architecture is implemented in VHDL and mapped to a low cost Xilinx XC3SD1800A-4 FPGA device. The implementation results
show that the proposed hardware can run at 101 MHz on this FPGA and consumes 32 BRAMs and 15384 slices
Hardware Implementation of the GPS authentication
In this paper, we explore new area/throughput trade- offs for the Girault,
Poupard and Stern authentication protocol (GPS). This authentication protocol
was selected in the NESSIE competition and is even part of the standard ISO/IEC
9798. The originality of our work comes from the fact that we exploit a fixed
key to increase the throughput. It leads us to implement GPS using the Chapman
constant multiplier. This parallel implementation is 40 times faster but 10
times bigger than the reference serial one. We propose to serialize this
multiplier to reduce its area at the cost of lower throughput. Our hybrid
Chapman's multiplier is 8 times faster but only twice bigger than the
reference. Results presented here allow designers to adapt the performance of
GPS authentication to their hardware resources. The complete GPS prover side is
also integrated in the network stack of the PowWow sensor which contains an
Actel IGLOO AGL250 FPGA as a proof of concept.Comment: ReConFig - International Conference on ReConFigurable Computing and
FPGAs (2012
An efficient hardware architecture for H.264 intra prediction algorithm
In this paper, we present an efficient hardware architecture for real-time implementation of intra prediction algorithm used in H.264 / MPEG4 Part 10 video coding standard. The hardware design is based on a novel organization of the intra prediction equations. This hardware is designed to be used as part of a complete H.264 video coding system for portable applications. The proposed architecture is implemented in Verilog HDL. The Verilog RTL code is verified to work at 90 MHz in a Xilinx Virtex II FPGA. The FPGA implementation can process 27 VGA frames (640x480) per second
Memristor Crossbar-based Hardware Implementation of IDS Method
Ink Drop Spread (IDS) is the engine of Active Learning Method (ALM), which is
the methodology of soft computing. IDS, as a pattern-based processing unit,
extracts useful information from a system subjected to modeling. In spite of
its excellent potential in solving problems such as classification and modeling
compared to other soft computing tools, finding its simple and fast hardware
implementation is still a challenge. This paper describes a new hardware
implementation of IDS method based on the memristor crossbar structure. In
addition of simplicity, being completely real-time, having low latency and the
ability to continue working after the occurrence of power breakdown are some of
the advantages of our proposed circuit.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, Submitted to IEEE Transaction on Fuzzy System
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