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Bandwidth (signal processing)

About: Bandwidth (signal processing) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 48550 publications have been published within this topic receiving 600741 citations. The topic is also known as: Bandwidth (signal processing) & bandwidth.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For high permittivity layers, it is shown that the CCA is a better solution than the Jaumann absorber and improvements both in thickness and bandwidth are possible.
Abstract: A simple, fast and efficient method for designing wideband radar absorbers is proposed. The idea is to modify the circuit analog absorber method without perturbing the bandwidth. This is done by utilizing the asymptotic behavior of such an absorber at low frequency and replacing the band-stop resonating frequency selective surfaces with low-pass capacitive ones, which can be synthesized by square patches. It is shown that higher frequencies are not influenced by these modifications. A thin wideband capacitive circuit absorber (CCA) is presented with 28% reduction of thickness and 57% increase of bandwidth in comparison to the Salisbury screen. It is also explained why some optimized metamaterial designs fail to compete with the CCA method. For high permittivity layers, it is shown that the CCA is a better solution than the Jaumann absorber and improvements both in thickness and bandwidth are possible. A three layered ultrawideband CCA is presented with total thickness of 15.1 mm.

191 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel multiuser-interference (MUI)-free code division multiple access (CDMA) transceiver for frequency-selective multipath channels is developed, relying on chip-interleaving and zero padded transmissions, which allows for perfectly constant modulus transmissions.
Abstract: A novel multiuser-interference (MUI)-free code division multiple access (CDMA) transceiver for frequency-selective multipath channels is developed. Relying on chip-interleaving and zero padded transmissions, orthogonality among different users' spreading codes is maintained at the receiver even after frequency-selective propagation. As a result, deterministic multiuser separation with low-complexity code-matched filtering becomes possible without loss of maximum likelihood optimality. In addition to MUI-free reception, the proposed system guarantees channel-irrespective symbol detection and achieves high bandwidth efficiency by increasing the symbol block size. Filling the zero-gaps with known symbols allows for perfectly constant modulus transmissions. Important variants of the proposed transceivers are derived to include cyclic prefixed transmissions and various redundant or nonredundant precoding alternatives. (Semi-) blind channel estimation algorithms are also discussed. Simulation results demonstrate improved performance of the proposed system relative to competing alternatives.

190 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
04 Oct 2017
TL;DR: This paper presents RFind, a new technology that brings the benefits of ultra-wideband localization to the billions of RFIDs in today's world and can emulate over 220MHz of bandwidth on tags designed with a communication bandwidth of only tens to hundreds of kHz, while remaining compliant with FCC regulations.
Abstract: State-of-the-art RFID localization systems fall under two categories. The first category operates with off-the-shelf narrowband RFID tags but makes restrictive assumptions on the environment or the tag's movement patterns. The second category does not make such restrictive assumptions; however, it requires designing new ultra-wideband hardware for RFIDs and uses the large bandwidth to directly compute a tag's 3D location. Hence, while the first category is restrictive, the second one requires replacing the billions of RFIDs already produced and deployed annually. This paper presents RFind, a new technology that brings the benefits of ultra-wideband localization to the billions of RFIDs in today's world. RFind does not require changing today's passive narrowband RFID tags. Instead, it leverages their underlying physical properties to emulate a very large bandwidth and uses it for localization. Our empirical results demonstrate that RFind can emulate over 220MHz of bandwidth on tags designed with a communication bandwidth of only tens to hundreds of kHz, while remaining compliant with FCC regulations. This, combined with a new super-resolution algorithm over this bandwidth, enables RFind to perform 3D localization with sub-centimeter accuracy in each of the x/y/z dimensions, without making any restrictive assumptions on the tag's motion or the environment.

190 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proposed photonics-based radar is an effective solution to overcome the limitations on operation bandwidth and processing speed of current radar imaging technologies, which may enable applications where high-resolution and real-time radar imaging is required.
Abstract: A photonics-based radar with generation and de-chirp processing of broadband linear frequency modulated continuous-wave (LFMCW) signal in optical domain is proposed for high-resolution and real-time inverse synthetic aperture radar (ISAR) imaging. In the proposed system, a broadband LFMCW signal is generated by a photonic frequency quadrupler based on a single integrated electro-optical modulator, and the echoes reflected from the targets are de-chirped to a low frequency signal by a microwave photonic frequency mixer. The proposed radar can operate at a high frequency with a large bandwidth, and thus achieve an ultra-high range resolution for ISAR imaging. Thanks to the wideband photonic de-chirp technique, the radar receiver could apply low-speed analog-to-digital conversion and mature digital signal processing, which makes real-time ISAR imaging possible. A K-band photonics-based radar with an instantaneous bandwidth of 8 GHz (18-26 GHz) is established and its performance for ISAR imaging is experimentally investigated. Results show that a recorded two-dimensional imaging resolution of ~2 cm × ~2 cm is achieved with a sampling rate of 100 MSa/s in the receiver. Besides, fast ISAR imaging with 100 frames per second is verified. The proposed radar is an effective solution to overcome the limitations on operation bandwidth and processing speed of current radar imaging technologies, which may enable applications where high-resolution and real-time radar imaging is required.

190 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a low-Q varactors are incorporated as part of the inter-resonator and external coupling mechanisms without degrading the overall high Q of the original filter.
Abstract: In this paper, the authors present a design technique that enables inter-resonator and external coupling control for high-quality-factor (Q) tunable bandpass filters. The design incorporates low-Q varactors as part of the inter-resonator and external coupling mechanisms without degrading the overall high Q of the original filter. Detailed design methodology and equations are presented to illustrate the concepts. A first-time demonstration of these concepts is presented for a widely tunable high-Q evanescent-mode cavity bandpass filter. The cavities are integrated in a low-loss substrate with commercially available piezoelectric actuators and solid-state varactors for frequency and bandwidth tuning. This technique allows for reduced bandwidth variation over large tuning ranges. As one example, a constant 25-MHz absolute-bandwidth filter in the 0.8-1.43-GHz tuning range with loss that is as low as 1.6 dB is presented as an example. The filter third-order intercept point is between 32.8 and 35.9 dBm over this tuning range. To further show the impact of the technique on high- Q filters, a filter Q that is as high as 750 is demonstrated in the range of 3-5.6 GHz, while using low-Q varactors (Q < 30 at 5 GHz for a 0.4-pF capacitance) to achieve more than 50% reduction in bandwidth variation over the tuning range.

190 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202217
20211,517
20202,656
20193,121
20183,100
20172,744