Institution
Qualcomm
Company•Farnborough, United Kingdom•
About: Qualcomm is a company organization based out in Farnborough, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Wireless & Signal. The organization has 19408 authors who have published 38405 publications receiving 804693 citations. The organization is also known as: Qualcomm Incorporated & Qualcomm, Inc..
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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02 Apr 2004TL;DR: In this paper, a protection layer covers the cavity-side surface of a bottom electrode of a interferometric modulation pixel, and a sacrificial layer between the bottom electrode and the top electrode is being etched.
Abstract: A protection layer covers the cavity-side surface of a bottom electrode of a interferometric modulation pixel. Consequently, the protective layer protects the surface of the bottom electrode while a sacrificial layer between the bottom electrode and the top electrode is being etched. Thus, the distance between the bottom electrode and the top electrode is maintained, thereby ensuring that only the light with desired wavelengths is reflected by the interferometric modulation pixel.
189 citations
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22 Apr 2003TL;DR: In this paper, an estimated position estimate for a wireless terminal is first obtained based on a first (accurate) position determination sub-system, and then the estimated position is updated based on the corrected pseudo-ranges for these transmitters.
Abstract: Techniques to determine a position estimate for a wireless terminal. An accurate position estimate for the terminal is initially obtained (e.g., based on a first (accurate) position determination sub-system). For each of one or more transmitters (e.g., base stations) in a second (less accurate) position determination sub-system, an 'expected' pseudo-range is computed based on the accurate position estimate for the terminal and the base station location, a 'measured' pseudo-range is also obtained, and a pseudo-range residual is then determined based on the expected pseudo-range and the measured pseudo-range. Thereafter, to determine an updated position estimate for the terminal, measured pseudo-ranges are obtained for a sufficient number of transmitters. The measured pseudo-range for each base station may be corrected based on the associated residual. The updated position estimate is then determined based on the corrected pseudo-ranges for these transmitters.
189 citations
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01 Oct 1998TL;DR: QoSMIC is a multicast protocol for the Internet that supports QoS-sensitive routing, and minimizes the importance of a priori configuration decisions, and is resource-efficient, robust, flexible, and scalable.
Abstract: In this paper, we present, QoSMIC, a multicast protocol for the Internet that supports QoS-sensitive routing, and minimizes the importance of a priori configuration decisions (such as core selection). The protocol is resource-efficient, robust, flexible, and scalable. In addition, our protocol is provably loop-free.Our protocol starts with a resources-saving tree (Shared Tree) and individual receivers switch to a QoS-competitive tree (Source-Based Tree) when necessary. In both trees, the new destination is able to choose the most promising among several paths. An innovation is that we use dynamic routing information without relying on a link state exchange protocol to provide it. Our protocol limits the effect of pre-configuration decisions drastically, by separating the management from the data transfer functions; administrative routers are not necessarily part of the tree. This separation increases the robustness, and flexibility of the protocol. Furthermore, QoSMIC is able to adapt dynamically to the conditions of the network.The QoSMIC protocol introduces several new ideas that make it more flexible than other protocols proposed to date. In fact, many of the other protocols, (such as YAM, PIMSM, BGMP, CBT) can be seen as special cases of QoSMIC. This paper presents the motivation behind, and the design of QoSMIC, and provides both analytical and experimental results to support our claims.
188 citations
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TL;DR: A new necessary condition on the number of measurements for asymptotically reliable detection with maximum-likelihood (ML) estimation and Gaussian measurement matrices is derived and shown that the gap between thresholding and ML can be described by a simple expression in terms of the total signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
Abstract: The paper considers the problem of detecting the sparsity pattern of a k -sparse vector in \BBR n from m random noisy measurements. A new necessary condition on the number of measurements for asymptotically reliable detection with maximum-likelihood (ML) estimation and Gaussian measurement matrices is derived. This necessary condition for ML detection is compared against a sufficient condition for simple maximum correlation (MC) or thresholding algorithms. The analysis shows that the gap between thresholding and ML can be described by a simple expression in terms of the total signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), with the gap growing with increasing SNR. Thresholding is also compared against the more sophisticated Lasso and orthogonal matching pursuit (OMP) methods. At high SNRs, it is shown that the gap between Lasso and OMP over thresholding is described by the range of powers of the nonzero component values of the unknown signals. Specifically, the key benefit of Lasso and OMP over thresholding is the ability of Lasso and OMP to detect signals with relatively small components.
188 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a theoretical analysis of harmonically terminated high-efficiency power rectifiers and experimental validation on a single Schottky-diode rectifier and a class-F-1 GaN transistor rectifier are presented.
Abstract: This paper presents a theoretical analysis of harmonically terminated high-efficiency power rectifiers and experimental validation on a class-C single Schottky-diode rectifier and a class- F-1 GaN transistor rectifier. The theory is based on a Fourier analysis of current and voltage waveforms, which arise across the rectifying element when different harmonic terminations are presented at its terminals. An analogy to harmonically terminated power amplifier (PA) theory is discussed. From the analysis, one can obtain an optimal value for the dc load given the RF circuit design. An upper limit on rectifier efficiency is derived for each case as a function of the device on-resistance. Measured results from fundamental frequency source-pull measurement of a Schottky diode rectifier with short-circuit terminations at the second and third harmonics are presented. A maximal device rectification efficiency of 72.8% at 2.45 GHz matches the theoretical prediction. A 2.14-GHz GaN HEMT rectifier is designed based on a class-F-1 PA. The gate of the transistor is terminated in an optimal impedance for self-synchronous rectification. Measurements of conversion efficiency and output dc voltage for varying gate RF impedance, dc load, and gate bias are shown with varying input RF power at the drain. The rectifier demonstrates an efficiency of 85% for a 10-W input RF power at the transistor drain with a dc voltage of 30 V across a 98-Ω resistor.
187 citations
Authors
Showing all 19413 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Jian Yang | 142 | 1818 | 111166 |
Xiaodong Wang | 135 | 1573 | 117552 |
Jeffrey G. Andrews | 110 | 562 | 63334 |
Martin Vetterli | 105 | 761 | 57825 |
Vinod Menon | 101 | 269 | 60241 |
Michael I. Miller | 92 | 599 | 34915 |
David Tse | 92 | 438 | 67248 |
Kannan Ramchandran | 91 | 592 | 34845 |
Michael Luby | 89 | 282 | 34894 |
Max Welling | 89 | 441 | 64602 |
R. Srikant | 84 | 432 | 26439 |
Jiaya Jia | 80 | 294 | 33545 |
Hai Li | 79 | 570 | 33848 |
Simon Haykin | 77 | 454 | 62085 |
Christopher W. Bielawski | 76 | 334 | 32512 |