O
Osman Ceylan
Researcher at Istanbul Technical University
Publications - 49
Citations - 217
Osman Ceylan is an academic researcher from Istanbul Technical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amplifier & RF power amplifier. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 48 publications receiving 146 citations.
Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Comparing ray tracing, free space path loss and logarithmic distance path loss models in success of indoor localization with RSSI
TL;DR: Free space path loss, ray tracing with one and two reflection points and logarithmic distance path loss models are used to determine distance between nodes according to RSSI values.
Journal ArticleDOI
Automated Deep Neural Learning-Based Optimization for High Performance High Power Amplifier Designs
TL;DR: This study presents an automated optimization-oriented strategy for designing high power amplifiers (HPAs) using deep neural networks (DNNs) that addresses the problem of heavy reliance of the system performance on the designer's experience and automatically generates valid layouts.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Power Amplifier Design Optimization with Simultaneous Cooperation of EDA Tool and Numeric Analyzer
TL;DR: In this study, EDA and numerical analysis tools are operated collaboratively and sequentially to create an automated co-simulation based iterative design and optimization methodology for wideband power amplifier design.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Low cost S Band communication system design for nano satellites
TL;DR: In this project, 2.4 GHz (S Band) communication system is designed for LEO satellites (700–900 km) and includes system-on-chip transmitter device, preamplifier, band pass filter, power amplifier and microstrip antenna array.
Journal ArticleDOI
Small Satellites Rock A Software-Defined Radio Modem and Ground Station Design for Cube Satellite Communication
Osman Ceylan,Alican Caglar,Halim Bahadir Tugrel,Hasan Onur Cakar,Ahmet Oguz Kislal,Kaan Kula,Hasan Bülent Yağcı +6 more
TL;DR: More than 6,000 artificial satellites have been deployed since the first, Sputnik, in 1957; some 1,000 are still in operation [1] and when most people not involved in satellite technologies see or hear the word "satellite", they think of satellites weighing several tons as mentioned in this paper.