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Communication channel

About: Communication channel is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 137411 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1715077 citations. The topic is also known as: communication channel & communications channel.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of millimeter-wave 60-GHz frequency range propagation channel measurements that are performed in various indoor environments for continuous-route and direction-of-arrival (DOA) measurement campaigns are presented and diffraction is found to be a significant propagation mechanism in NLOS propagation environments.
Abstract: This paper presents and analyzes the results of millimeter-wave 60-GHz frequency range propagation channel measurements that are performed in various indoor environments for continuous-route and direction-of-arrival (DOA) measurement campaigns. The statistical parameters of the propagation channel, such as the number of paths, the RMS delay spread, the path loss, and the shadowing, are inspected. Moreover, the interdependencies of different characteristics of the multipath channel are also investigated. A linear relationship between the number of paths and the delay spread is found, negative cross correlation between the shadow fading and the delay spread can be established, and an upper bound exponential model of the delay spread and the path loss is developed to estimate the worst case of the RMS delay spread at given path loss. Based on the DOA measurements that are carried out in a room [line of sight (LOS)] and in a corridor with both LOS and nonline-of-sight (NLOS) scenarios, radio-wave propagation mechanisms are studied. It is found that considering the direct wave and the first-order reflected waves from smooth surfaces is sufficient in the LOS cases. Transmission loss is very high; however, diffraction is found to be a significant propagation mechanism in NLOS propagation environments. The results can be used for the design of 60-GHz radio systems in short-range wireless applications.

342 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that the compress-and-forward (CF) protocol achieves exchange rates within a constant bit offset of the optimal exchange rate, independent of the power constraints of the terminals in the network.
Abstract: The multiuser communication channel, in which multiple users exchange information with the help of a relay terminal, termed the multiway relay channel (mRC), is introduced. In this model, multiple interfering clusters of users communicate simultaneously, such that the users within the same cluster wish to exchange messages among themselves, i.e., each user multicasts its message to all the other users in its own cluster. It is assumed that the users cannot receive each other's signals directly. Hence, the relay terminal in this model is the enabler of communication. In particular, restricted encoders are considered, such that the encoding function of each user depends only on its own message and the received signal is used only for decoding the messages of the other users in the cluster. Achievable rate regions and an outer bound are characterized for the Gaussian mRC, and their comparison is presented in terms of the exchange rate, the symmetric rate point in the capacity region in a symmetric Gaussian mRC scenario. It is shown that the compress-and-forward (CF) protocol achieves exchange rates within a constant bit offset of the optimal exchange rate, independent of the power constraints of the terminals in the network. A finite bit gap between the exchange rates achieved by the CF and the amplify-and-forward protocols is also shown. The two special cases of the mRC, the full data exchange model, in which every user wants to receive messages of all other users, and the pairwise data exchange model which consists of multiple two-way relay channels, are investigated in detail. In particular for the pairwise data exchange model, in addition to the proposed random coding-based achievable schemes, a nested lattice coding-based scheme is also presented and is shown to achieve exchange rates within a constant bit gap of the exchange capacity.

341 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A class of aeronautical wide-band channel models is proposed, featuring parking and taxi environments, takeoff and landing situations, and en-route scenarios for ground-air and air-air links, suitable for channel emulators that can be easily implemented on digital computers or in hardware.
Abstract: A class of aeronautical wide-band channel models is proposed, featuring parking and taxi environments, takeoff and landing situations, and en-route scenarios for ground-air and air-air links. Typical and worst case parameter sets are suggested, based on published measurement results and empirical data. The models are suitable for channel emulators that can be easily implemented on digital computers or in hardware and thus are useful for the validation of digital aeronautical links. A time-domain and frequency-domain implementation of such a channel emulator are derived, and results for a typical multicarrier system are presented. It is shown that the scenarios have distinguishable performance results depending on the underlying maximum ranges and shapes of the Doppler and delay spectra and the presence of a line-of-sight path. Finally, the degrading effects of intersymbol interference and intersubcarrier interference on the multicarrier signal are explained.

338 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work considers multicell multiuser MIMO systems with a very large number of antennas at the base station (BS) and shows that when the number of BS antennas goes to infinity, the system performance under a finite-dimensional channel model with P angular bins is the same as the performance under an uncorrelated channel models with P antennas.
Abstract: We consider multicell multiuser MIMO systems with a very large number of antennas at the base station (BS). We assume that the channel is estimated by using uplink training. We further consider a physical channel model where the angular domain is separated into a finite number of distinct directions. We analyze the so-called pilot contamination effect discovered in previous work, and show that this effect persists under the finite-dimensional channel model that we consider. In particular, we consider a uniform array at the BS. For this scenario, we show that when the number of BS antennas goes to infinity, the system performance under a finite-dimensional channel model with P angular bins is the same as the performance under an uncorrelated channel model with P antennas. We further derive a lower bound on the achievable rate of uplink data transmission with a linear detector at the BS. We then specialize this lower bound to the cases of maximum-ratio combining (MRC) and zero-forcing (ZF) receivers, for a finite and an infinite number of BS antennas. Numerical results corroborate our analysis and show a comparison between the performances of MRC and ZF in terms of sum-rate.

337 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
S.S. Ghassemzadeh1, Rittwik Jana1, Christopher W. Rice1, W. Turin1, Vahid Tarokh1 
TL;DR: A path loss model as well as a second-order autoregressive model is proposed for frequency response generation of the UWB indoor channel and results of frequency-domain channel sounding in residential environments are described.
Abstract: This paper describes the results of frequency-domain channel sounding in residential environments. It consists of detailed characterization of complex frequency responses of ultra-wideband (UWB) signals having a nominal center frequency of 5 GHz. A path loss model as well as a second-order autoregressive model is proposed for frequency response generation of the UWB indoor channel. Probability distributions of the model parameters for different locations are presented. Also, time-domain results such as root mean square delay spread and percent of captured power are presented.

336 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202270
20214,425
20206,535
20197,160
20187,052
20176,315