435,889 research outputs found
Adaptive minimum symbol error rate beamforming assisted receiver for quadrature amplitude modulation systems
An adaptive beamforming assisted receiver is proposed for multiple antenna aided multiuser systems that employ bandwidth efficient quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM). A novel minimum symbol error rate (MSER) design is proposed for the beamforming assisted receiver, where the system’s symbol error rate is directly optimized. Hence the MSER approach provides a significant symbol error ratio performance enhancement over the classic minimum mean square error design. A sample-by-sample adaptive algorithm, referred to as the least symbol error rate (LBER) technique, is derived for allowing the adaptive implementation of the system to arrive from its initial beamforming weight solution to MSER beamforming solution
Iterative Multiuser Minimum Symbol Error Rate Beamforming Aided QAM Receiver
A novel iterative soft interference cancellation (SIC) aided beamforming receiver is developed for high-throughput quadrature amplitude modulation systems. The proposed SIC based minimum symbol error rate (MSER) multiuser detection scheme guarantees the direct and explicit minimization of the symbol error rate at the output of the detector. Adopting the extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) chart technique, we compare the EXIT characteristics of an iterative MSER multiuser detector (MUD) with those of the conventional minimum mean-squared error (MMSE) detector. As expected, the proposed SIC-MSER MUD outperforms the SIC-MMSE MUD. Index Terms—Beamforming, iterative multiuser detection, minimum symbol error rate, quadrature amplitude modulation
Real-time combiner loss
Telemetry signals from several channels are aligned in time and combined by the Real-Time Combiner (RTC) in order to increase the strength of the total signal. In this article, the impact of the timing jitter in the RTC on the bit/symbol error rate is investigated. Equations are derived for the timing jitter loss associated with the coded and uncoded channels. Included are curves that depict the bit-symbol error rate vs. E sub b/N sub 0 and E sub s/N sub 0 for some typical telemetry conditions. The losses are typically below 0.1 dB
Communication Over MIMO Broadcast Channels Using Lattice-Basis Reduction
A simple scheme for communication over MIMO broadcast channels is introduced
which adopts the lattice reduction technique to improve the naive channel
inversion method. Lattice basis reduction helps us to reduce the average
transmitted energy by modifying the region which includes the constellation
points. Simulation results show that the proposed scheme performs well, and as
compared to the more complex methods (such as the perturbation method) has a
negligible loss. Moreover, the proposed method is extended to the case of
different rates for different users. The asymptotic behavior of the symbol
error rate of the proposed method and the perturbation technique, and also the
outage probability for the case of fixed-rate users is analyzed. It is shown
that the proposed method, based on LLL lattice reduction, achieves the optimum
asymptotic slope of symbol-error-rate (called the precoding diversity). Also,
the outage probability for the case of fixed sum-rate is analyzed.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Trans. on Info. Theory (Jan. 15, 2006), Revised
(Jun. 12, 2007
Feedforward data-aided phase noise estimation from a DCT basis expansion
This contribution deals with phase noise estimation from pilot symbols. The phase noise process is approximated by an expansion of discrete cosine transform (DCT) basis functions containing only a few terms. We propose a feedforward algorithm that estimates the DCT coefficients without requiring detailed knowledge about the phase noise statistics. We demonstrate that the resulting (linearized) mean-square phase estimation error consists of two contributions: a contribution from the additive noise, that equals the Cramer-Rao lower bound, and a noise independent contribution, that results front the phase noise modeling error. We investigate the effect of the symbol sequence length, the pilot symbol positions, the number of pilot symbols, and the number of estimated DCT coefficients it the estimation accuracy and on the corresponding bit error rate (PER). We propose a pilot symbol configuration allowing to estimate any number of DCT coefficients not exceeding the number of pilot Symbols, providing a considerable Performance improvement as compared to other pilot symbol configurations. For large block sizes, the DCT-based estimation algorithm substantially outperforms algorithms that estimate only the time-average or the linear trend of the carrier phase. Copyright (C) 2009 J. Bhatti and M. Moeneclaey
Slot error rate performance of DH-PIM with symbol retransmission for optical wireless links
In this paper we introduce the dual-header pulse interval modulation (DH-PIM) technique employing a simple retransmission coupled with a majority decision detection scheme at the receiver. We analytically investigate the slot error rate (SER) performance and compare results with simulated data for the symbol retransmissions rates of three, four and five, showing a good agreement. We demonstrate that the proposed scheme significantly reduces the SER compared with the standard single symbol transmission system, with retransmission rate of five offering the highest code gain of 5 dB
- …
