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Joseph M. Kahn

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  371
Citations -  28499

Joseph M. Kahn is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multi-mode optical fiber & Multiplexing. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 360 publications receiving 26273 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph M. Kahn include University of California, Los Angeles & Tokyo University of Science.

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Wireless Infrared Communications

TL;DR: The use of infrared radiation as a medium for high-speed short-range wireless digital communication, and several modification formats, including on-off keying (OOK), pulse-position modulation (PPM), and subcarrier modulation, are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fading correlation and its effect on the capacity of multielement antenna systems

TL;DR: It is shown that the fading correlation affects the MEA capacity by modifying the distributions of the gains of these subchannels, which depends on the physical parameters of MEA and the scatterer characteristics.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Next century challenges: mobile networking for “Smart Dust”

TL;DR: This work reviews the key elements of the emergent technology of “Smart Dust” and outlines the research challenges they present to the mobile networking and systems community, which must provide coherent connectivity to large numbers of mobile network nodes co-located within a small volume.
Journal ArticleDOI

Free-space optical communication through atmospheric turbulence channels

TL;DR: The use of ML detection in spatial diversity reception to reduce the diversity gain penalty caused by correlation between the fading at different receivers is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compensation of Dispersion and Nonlinear Impairments Using Digital Backpropagation

TL;DR: In this article, the use of digital backpropagation (BP) in conjunction with coherent detection to jointly mitigate dispersion and fiber nonlinearity is studied. But the authors focus on the noniterative asymmetric split-step Fourier method (SSFM) for solving the inverse nonlinear Schrodinger equation (NLSE).