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Open AccessDissertation

On Linear Transmission Systems

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TLDR
The object in Part I is to study the impact of both the signaling rate and the pulse shape on the information rate of single antenna, single carrier linear modulation systems, and a iterative optimization method is developed, which produces precoders improving upon the best known ones in the literature.
Abstract
This thesis is divided into two parts. Part I analyzes the information rate of single antenna, single carrier linear modulation systems. The information rate of a system is the maximum number of bits that can be transmitted during a channel usage, and is achieved by Gaussian symbols. It depends on the underlying pulse shape in a linear modulated signal and also the signaling rate, the rate at which the Gaussian symbols are transmitted. The object in Part I is to study the impact of both the signaling rate and the pulse shape on the information rate. Part II of the thesis is devoted to multiple antenna systems (MIMO), and more specifically to linear precoders for MIMO channels. Linear precoding is a practical scheme for improving the performance of a MIMO system, and has been studied intensively during the last four decades. In practical applications, the symbols to be transmitted are taken from a discrete alphabet, such as quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM), and it is of interest to find the optimal linear precoder for a certain performance measure of the MIMO channel. The design problem depends on the particular performance measure and the receiver structure. The main difficulty in finding the optimal precoders is the discrete nature of the problem, and mostly suboptimal solutions are proposed. The problem has been well investigated when linear receivers are employed, for which optimal precoders were found for many different performance measures. However, in the case of the optimal maximum likelihood (ML) receiver, only suboptimal constructions have been possible so far. Part II starts by proposing new novel, low complexity, suboptimal precoders, which provide a low bit error rate (BER) at the receiver. Later, an iterative optimization method is developed, which produces precoders improving upon the best known ones in the literature. The resulting precoders turn out to exhibit a certain structure, which is then analyzed and proved to be optimal for large alphabets.

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Dissertation

Reduced Receivers for Faster-than-Nyquist Signaling and General Linear Channels

Adnan Prlja
TL;DR: A framework to design reduced-complexity receivers for FTN and general linear channels that achieve optimal or near-optimal performance and an improvement of the minimum phase conversion that sharpens the focus of the ISI model energy is proposed.
References
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Book

Perfect Lattices in Euclidean Spaces

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the properties of Lattices, the Voronoi Algorithm, and the Configurations of Minimal Vectors, as well as some of the mechanisms used to derive these properties.
Book

Mimo Transceiver Design Via Majorization Theory

TL;DR: This text presents an up-to-date unified mathematical framework for the design of point- to-point MIMO transceivers with channel state information at both sides of the link according to an arbitrary cost function as a measure of the system performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mismatched decoding revisited: general alphabets, channels with memory, and the wide-band limit

TL;DR: The wide-band limit, and, in particular, the mismatch capacity per unit cost, and the achievable rates on an additive-noise spread-spectrum system with single-letter decoding and binary signaling are studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design and analysis of transmit-beamforming based on limited-rate feedback

TL;DR: This paper deals with design and performance analysis of transmit beamformers for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems based on bandwidth-limited information that is fed back from the receiver to the transmitter.
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