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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Interagency Arraying

Cox, Henry G. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 26-29, 1987 / Town and Country Hotel, San Diego, California / Voyager ground aperture requirements for Neptune encounter in August 1989 exceed the expected capabilities of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Deep Space Network (DSN) 70- and 34-meter antennas. Agreements have been consummated with the National Science Foundation to array the National Radio Astronomy Observatory's Very Large Array in New Mexico and with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization's Parkes Radio Telescope in Australia with the DSN. This technique, which was demonstrated during Voyager's Uranus encounter, will provide a greater return of imaging and non-imaging science data. The arrays consist of the normal facility receiving equipment at each location, augmented by special receiving, combining, recording, and monitor and control equipment. This equipment has been designed, is being implemented, and will be operated during the Neptune encounter to effectively double the available antenna aperture over the western United States and Australia.
12

ANTI-JAM PERFORMANCE OF SEVERAL DIVERSITY COMBINERS

Eng, Thomas 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 27-30, 1997 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / The relative anti-jam (AJ) performance of several diversity combiners are investigated. The modulation is 8-ary frequency-shift-keying (FSK), the demodulation process consists of energy detection of the eight frequency bins at each hop and the subsequent combining of detector outputs. Three combiners are considered : the linear combiner, where the detector outputs of each hop (corresponding to the same frequency bin) are summed without any processing; the self-normalized combiner, where the eight detector outputs of any particular hop are normalized so that they add to unity; and the max-normalized combiner, where the eight detector outputs of any hop are divided by the maximum value among those eight outputs. Results indicate that under worst-case tone jamming, the selfnormalized combiner performs the best, the max-normalized combiner second best, and the linear combiner performs the worst among the three.
13

Dependable systems integration using measurement theory and decision analysis

Prasad, Divya Kumari January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
14

Control of a Remote Receiving Station and Data Processing at RA Range Hebrides

Mackenzie, Donald, Fielding, Richard 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 17-20, 1994 / Town & Country Hotel and Conference Center, San Diego, California / The Royal Artillery Range (RA Range) is the British Army's weapons practice range in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. The large sea range is also used by the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy for new weapons system evaluation and in service practice firing. This paper describes the telemetry facility comprising of two prime sites separated by 40 miles of open sea. Tracking antennas and receivers are at the remote island site of St Kilda with data processing and control at the Range Control Base (RCB), Benbecula. To improve operational capabilities and effectiveness, full remote control and monitoring of the multiple receivers and combiners has been installed. Radar tracking outputs are processed in the telemetry computer to produce individual antenna pointing demands.
15

A spatial diversity scheme for fixed point indoor wireless communication

Gerein, Neil 09 January 2004
The ease with which indoor wireless systems can be installed has become their main selling feature. A desirable application for wireless systems is the transmission of compressed digital music in an indoor shopping mall environment. The indoor environment, with its many walls and highly reflective surfaces, has a high level of multipath. High levels of slowly changing multipath can cause deep fades, and therefore reduce the reliability of the system. <p> The proper use of multiple receiving elements is one way to mitigate the deep fades caused by multipath. The main objective of this thesis is to study a simple and cost effective approach to combining the signals from several receiving elements. A novel diversity combining approach using 2 receiving elements is presented. The novel diversity combining approach consists of periodically changing the phase of one of the two received signals. <p> A set of simulations was developed to study the effectiveness of the novel diversity combining method in mitigating deep multipath fades. The relative performances of two different implementations of the diversity combining were compared to a baseline test case that did not include diversity combining. In both of the simulated implementations, the diversity combining approach proved to be an effective means of mitigating the multipath fading phenomenon. <p> A proof-of-concept, bench-top hardware prototype was also developed. The transmitter and receiver were implemented in Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs). The laboratory testing of the hardware successfully illustrated the feasibility of the proof-of-concept system.
16

A spatial diversity scheme for fixed point indoor wireless communication

Gerein, Neil 09 January 2004 (has links)
The ease with which indoor wireless systems can be installed has become their main selling feature. A desirable application for wireless systems is the transmission of compressed digital music in an indoor shopping mall environment. The indoor environment, with its many walls and highly reflective surfaces, has a high level of multipath. High levels of slowly changing multipath can cause deep fades, and therefore reduce the reliability of the system. <p> The proper use of multiple receiving elements is one way to mitigate the deep fades caused by multipath. The main objective of this thesis is to study a simple and cost effective approach to combining the signals from several receiving elements. A novel diversity combining approach using 2 receiving elements is presented. The novel diversity combining approach consists of periodically changing the phase of one of the two received signals. <p> A set of simulations was developed to study the effectiveness of the novel diversity combining method in mitigating deep multipath fades. The relative performances of two different implementations of the diversity combining were compared to a baseline test case that did not include diversity combining. In both of the simulated implementations, the diversity combining approach proved to be an effective means of mitigating the multipath fading phenomenon. <p> A proof-of-concept, bench-top hardware prototype was also developed. The transmitter and receiver were implemented in Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs). The laboratory testing of the hardware successfully illustrated the feasibility of the proof-of-concept system.
17

Multiple antenna systems in a mobile-to-mobile environment

Kang, Heewon 20 November 2006 (has links)
The objective of this dissertation is to design new architectures for multiple antenna wireless communication systems operating in a mobile-to-mobile environment and to develop a theoretical framework according to which these systems can be analyzed. Recent information theory has demonstrated that the wireless channel can support enormous capacity if the multipath is properly exploited by using multiple antennas. Future communication systems will likely evolve into a variety of combinations encompassing mobile-to-mobile and mobile-to-fixed-station communications. Therefore, we explore the use of multiple antennas for mobile-to-mobile communications. Based on the characteristics of mobile-to-mobile radio channels, we propose new architectures that deploy directional antennas for multiple antenna systems operating in a mobile-to-mobile environment. The first architecture consists of multiple input and multiple output (MIMO) systems with directional antennas, which have good spatial correlation properties, and provides higher capacities than conventional systems without requiring a rich scattering environment. The second one consists of single input and multiple output (SIMO) systems with directional antennas, which improve signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) over conventional systems. We also propose a new combining scheme to select the outputs of optimal combing (SOOC) in this architecture. Optimal combining (OC) is the key technique for multiple antenna systems to suppress interference and mitigate the fading effects. Based on the complex random matrix theory, we develop an analytical framework for the performance analysis of OC. We derive several important closed-form solutions such as the moment generating function (MGF) and the joint eigenvalue distributions of SINR with arbitrary-power interferers and thermal noise. We also analyze the effects of spatial correlations on MIMO OC systems with arbitrary-power interferers in an interference environment. Our novel multiple antenna architectures and the theoretical framework according to which they can be analyzed would provide other researchers with useful tools to analyze and develop future MIMO systems.
18

Memory Effect Analysis and Power Combining Design of Power Amplifiers

Huang, Pin-Chiang 12 July 2010 (has links)
This thesis consists of two parts. Part one presents a design of class-AB power amplifier in 0.15£gm pHEMT process, and establishes a nonlinear model with memory effects for the power amplifier using Volterra series. To observe the memory effects, two-tone continuous wave signals have been applied to the model to predict the phase variation between IM3H and IM3L as a function of tone spacing. In the meanwhile, a time-domain measurement technique for the third-order intermodulation responses using a digital storage oscilloscope has been developed to verify the modeled predictions on IM3H and IM3L. Comparison between modeled and measured results shows good agreement. Part two of this thesis is to study the CMOS power-combining techniques. At first, the pros and cons between series and parallel combining transformers are discussed. Then, a design of class-E power amplifier using a pair of parallel combining transformers for power combining is presented. Both simulated and measured results show that the presented Class-E power amplifier has a high power-added efficiency.
19

A Study of Power Amplifier Distortion due to DC Bias Perturbation and a Push-Pull Design of CMOS Class-E Power Amplifier Using Power Combining

Chen, Chih-Hao 30 July 2009 (has links)
Abstract¡G This thesis studies the memory effect due to bias perturbation on digital predistortion technique, and employs multi-tone continuous wave signal and digital modulation signals with different bandwidth to discuss the performance of digital predistortion technique. Memory effect makes a great impact on the digital predistortion technique, and bias perturbation is one of the major causes. Lowering the bias perturbation can improve the effectiveness of digital predistortion technique. Another focus of this thesis is to design a Class E power amplifier in 0.18 £gm CMOS process. The power amplifier uses cascode structure to alleviate the breakdown voltage problem and employs power combining technique to achieve impedance transformation on chip for the purpose of increasing the output power and efficiency.
20

Low Complexity PSP-MLSE receiver for H-CPM with receive diversity.

Zhou, Li January 2009 (has links)
This thesis is a study of harmonized continuous phase modulation (H-CPM) coupled with receive diversity as applied to mobile radio communication applications. H-CPM is the modulation technique specified by the American Public Safety Communication Official Project 25 (APCO P25) Phase 2 standards, which is focused on public safety applications. Practical implementation of an H-CPM maximum likelihood sequence estimator (MLSE) receiver requires complex reduction techniques to ensure a cost effective form. In addition, it must be able to handle a fast fading environment, which is often encountered in public safety applications. Here, the reduction of receiver complexity and the combating of fast fading situations are investigated via MATLAB simulation. By using tilted phase and frequency pulse truncation techniques, the complexity of an H-CPM MLSE receiver is successfully reduced. In particular, the original 384-state receiver is first reduced to a 192-state receiver through the use of tilted phase. Then it is further reduced to 48-states and finally to 12-states by applying frequency pulse truncation. Simulation, assuming static channels, shows that the bit error rate (BER) performance of a 12-state receiver is essentially identical to that of a 384-state receiver, despite a 97% reduction in computational complexity. To take into account the effects of fading, channel gain estimation via persurvivor processing (PSP) is incorporated into the reduced complexity MLSE receiver. Using a weighted-sum approach to the PSP gain estimates, it was found that at Doppler shifts of 5 Hz, 40 Hz and 80 Hz, the receiver performance was comparable to that obtainable by rival techniques. To further reduce the effect of fading, receive diversity combining was investigated, where a three-antenna diversity scheme is applied to the reduced state PSP-based MLSE receiver. Three different combining techniques, namely selective combining (SC), equal gain combining (EGC) and maximum ratio combining (MRC) were compared. It was found via simulation that the best performance is achieved using MRC, with as much as 14dB improvement achieved by applying triple diversity MRC.

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