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Robert M. Edwards

Researcher at Loughborough University

Publications -  180
Citations -  2310

Robert M. Edwards is an academic researcher from Loughborough University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Control system & Antenna (radio). The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 179 publications receiving 2139 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert M. Edwards include Argonne National Laboratory & Pennsylvania State University.

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Journal Article

Experimental development of power reactor intelligent control

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the initial development of an experimental sequence for developing, testing, and verifying intelligent fault-accommodating control for commercial nuclear power plant application The sequence includes an ultra-safe university research reactor (TRIGA) and a passively safe experimental power plant (Experimental Breeder Reactor 2)
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Two Dimension DOA ESPRIT Algorithm Based on Parallel Coprime Arrays and Complementary Sequence in MIMO Communication System

TL;DR: A novel two dimension (2-D) direction of arrival (DOA) estimation method based on complementary sequence and ESPRIT algorithm under parallel coprime Arrays is proposed for multiple input and multiple output (MIMO) system.
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Characterization of on-body communication channel for vertical and horizontal polarization of center fed dipole at GSM frequency

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present experimental and simulation results for two different polarizations of center-fed dipole antenna on human body at mobile communication frequency, and suggest that vertical polarization of dipole gives better transmission coefficient than horizontal polarization.
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Coupled dipole antennas for on/off-body communications at 2.45 GHz

TL;DR: In this article, three experiments with coupled dipoles were carried out in order to determine the optimal distance where an efficient communication link can be established, and the simulations results showed that when the subcutaneous dipole is installed adjacently to the surface of the skin, the dipole mounted above the skin level should be in the range of 20 mm to 25 mm for efficient communication.
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Recognising people using smart phone antennas: A fuzzy biometric

TL;DR: Investigating the effects of different people on the input impedance of mobile phone antennas with the aim of establishing whether the effect is distinct enough to allow a fuzzy biometric to be achieved found that the effect of each volunteer on the antenna's input impedance varied significantly.