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Interference Management and Energy Efficiency in Satellite CommunicationsLombardo, Francesco <1985> 16 May 2014 (has links)
The main areas of research of this thesis are Interference Management and Link-Level Power Efficiency for Satellite Communications. The thesis is divided in two parts. Part I tackles the problem of interference environments in satellite communications, and interference mitigation strategies, not just in terms of avoidance of the interferers, but also in terms of actually exploiting the interference present in the system as a useful signal. The analysis follows a top-down approach across different levels of investigation, starting from system level consideration on interference management, down to link-level aspects and to intra-receiver design. Interference Management techniques are proposed at all the levels of investigation, with interesting results.
Part II is related to efficiency in the power domain, for instance in terms of required Input Back-off at the power amplifiers, which can be an issue for waveform based on linear modulations, due to their varying envelope. To cope with such aspects, an analysis is carried out to compare linear modulation with waveforms based on constant envelope modulations. It is shown that in some scenarios, constant envelope waveforms, even if at lower spectral efficiency, outperform linear modulation waveform in terms of energy efficiency.
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Design of optical networks for advanced applications / Progettazione di reti ottiche a supporto di applicazioni avanzateCampi, Aldo <1974> 18 May 2009 (has links)
Nowadays, computing is migrating from traditional high performance and distributed computing to pervasive and utility computing based on heterogeneous networks and clients. The current trend suggests that future IT services will rely on distributed resources and on fast communication of heterogeneous contents.
The success of this new range of services is directly linked to the effectiveness of the infrastructure in delivering them. The communication infrastructure will be the aggregation of different technologies even though the current trend suggests the emergence of single IP based transport service.
Optical networking is a key technology to answer the increasing requests for dynamic bandwidth allocation and configure multiple topologies over the same physical layer infrastructure, optical networks today are still “far” from accessible from directly configure and offer network services and need to be enriched with more “user oriented” functionalities. However, current Control Plane architectures only facilitate efficient end-to-end connectivity provisioning and certainly cannot meet future network service requirements, e.g. the coordinated control of resources.
The overall objective of this work is to provide the network with the improved usability and accessibility of the services provided by the Optical Network. More precisely, the definition of a service-oriented architecture is the enable technology to allow user applications to gain benefit of advanced services over an underlying dynamic optical layer. The definition of a service oriented networking architecture based on advanced optical network technologies facilitates users and applications access to abstracted levels of information regarding offered advanced network services.
This thesis faces the problem to define a Service Oriented Architecture and its relevant building blocks, protocols and languages. In particular, this work has been focused on the use of the SIP protocol as a inter-layers signalling protocol which defines the Session Plane in conjunction with the Network Resource Description language.
On the other hand, an advantage optical network must accommodate high data bandwidth with different granularities. Currently, two main technologies are emerging promoting the development of the future optical transport network, Optical Burst and Packet Switching. Both technologies respectively promise to provide all optical burst or packet switching instead of the current circuit switching. However, the electronic domain is still present in the scheduler forwarding and routing decision.
Because of the high optics transmission frequency the burst or packet scheduler faces a difficult challenge, consequentially, high performance and time focused design of both memory and forwarding logic is need.
This open issue has been faced in this thesis proposing an high efficiently implementation of burst and packet scheduler. The main novelty of the proposed implementation is that the scheduling problem has turned into simple calculation of a min/max function and the function complexity is almost independent of on the traffic conditions.
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Synchronization and Detection Techniques for Navigation and Communication SystemsPalestini, Claudio <1982> 10 May 2010 (has links)
Synchronization is a key issue in any communication system, but it becomes fundamental in the navigation systems, which are entirely based on the estimation of the time delay of the signals coming from the satellites. Thus, even if synchronization has been a well known topic for many years, the introduction of new modulations and new physical layer techniques in the modern standards makes the traditional synchronization strategies completely ineffective. For this reason, the design of advanced and innovative techniques for synchronization in modern communication systems, like DVB-SH, DVB-T2, DVB-RCS, WiMAX, LTE, and in the modern navigation system, like Galileo, has been the topic of the activity. Recent years have seen the consolidation of two different trends: the introduction of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) in the communication systems, and of the Binary Offset Carrier (BOC) modulation in the modern Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). Thus, a particular attention has been given to the investigation of the synchronization algorithms in these areas. / La sincronizzazione è un elemento chiave in ogni sistema di comunicazione, ma diventa fondamentale nei sistemi di navigazione, che sono basati sulla stima del ritardo di propagazione dei segnali provenienti dai satelliti. Quindi, nonostante la sincronizzazione sia stata studiata a lungo nel corso degli anni, l'introduzione di nuove modulazioni e nuove tecniche di strato fisico nei moderni standard ha reso le tradizionali strategie di sincronizzazione completamente inefficaci. Per questo motivo, il progetto di tecniche avanzate ed innovative per la sincronizzazione nei moderni sistemi di comunicazione, come DVB-SH, DVB-T2, DVB-RCS, WiMAX, LTE, e navigazione, come Galileo, è stato l'oggetto di questa attività. Inoltre, gli ultimi anni hanno visto il consolidamento di due differenti tendenze: l'introduzione dell'Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) nei sistemi di comunicazione, e della modulazione Binary Offset Carrier (BOC) nei moderni sistemi Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), Quindi, particolare attenzione è stata dedicata allo studio di algoritmi di sincronizzazione in questi ambiti.
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A Unitary Approach to Information and Estimation Theory in Digital Communication SystemsCandreva, Enzo Alberto <1983> 10 May 2010 (has links)
This thesis presents the outcomes of a Ph.D. course in telecommunications engineering. It is focused on the optimization of the physical layer of digital communication systems and it provides innovations for both multi- and single-carrier systems. For the former type we have first addressed the problem of the capacity in presence of several nuisances. Moreover, we have extended the concept of Single Frequency Network to the satellite scenario, and then we have introduced a novel concept in subcarrier data mapping, resulting in a very low PAPR of the OFDM signal.
For single carrier systems we have proposed a method to optimize constellation design in presence of a strong distortion, such as the non linear distortion provided by satellites' on board high power amplifier, then we developed a method to calculate the bit/symbol error rate related to a given constellation, achieving an improved accuracy with respect to the traditional Union Bound with no additional complexity. Finally we have designed a low complexity SNR estimator, which saves one-half of multiplication with respect to the ML estimator, and it has similar estimation accuracy. / Questa tesi presenta i risultati ottenuti durante un dottorato di ricerca in ingegneria delle telecomunicazioni. Oggetto di studio è stato il livello fisico dei sistemi di trasmissione numerica, e sono state proposte innovazioni per i sistemi multi-portante e a portante singola. Nel primo caso è stata valutata la capacità di un sistema affetto da varie non idealità. In seguito l'idea di Single Frequency Network è stata estesa dall'ambito terrestre a quello satellitare, ed infine è stata presentata una nuova tecnica per effettuare il mapping da bit a simboli, che ha permesso di raggiungere fattori di cresta particolarmente bassi per il segnale OFDM.
Per i sistemi a portante singola, è stato proposto un metodo per ottimizare il progetto delle costellazioni in presenza di una forte distorsione, quale ad esempio la distorsione non lineare dovuta agli amplificatori di potenza a bordo dei satelliti. In seguito è stato sviluppato un metodo per calcolare la probabilità d'errore per bit e per simbolo riferita ad una data costellazione. Tale metodo ha la stessa complessità dello Union Bound ma risulta essere più accurato. Infine si è progettato uno stimatore di rapporto segnale-rumore, che permette il risparmio di metà delle moltiplicazioni rispetto al tradizionale stimatore a massima verosimiglianza, ma che mantiene prestazioni di stima comparabili.
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Design and control techniques of optical networksMuretto, Giovanni <1976> 25 May 2007 (has links)
The world of communication has changed quickly in the last decade resulting in the the rapid increase in the pace of peoples’ lives. This is due to the explosion of mobile communication and the internet which has now reached all levels of society. With such pressure for access to communication there is increased demand for bandwidth. Photonic technology is the right solution for high speed networks that have to supply wide bandwidth to new communication service providers. In particular this Ph.D. dissertation deals with DWDM optical packet-switched networks. The issue introduces a huge quantity of problems from physical layer up to transport layer. Here this subject is tackled from the network level perspective. The long term solution represented by optical packet switching has been fully explored in this years together with the Network Research Group at the department of Electronics, Computer Science and System of the University of Bologna. Some national as well as international projects supported this research like the Network of Excellence (NoE) e-Photon/ONe, funded by the European Commission in the Sixth Framework Programme and INTREPIDO project (End-to-end Traffic Engineering and Protection for IP over DWDM Optical Networks) funded by the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Scientific Research. Optical packet switching for DWDM networks is studied at single node level as well as at network level. In particular the techniques discussed are thought to be implemented for a long-haul transport network
that connects local and metropolitan networks around the world. The main issues faced are contention resolution in a asynchronous variable packet length environment, adaptive routing, wavelength conversion and node architecture. Characteristics that a network must assure as quality of service and resilience are also explored at both node and network level. Results are mainly evaluated via simulation and through analysis.
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High-performance switching architectures for optical networks / Studio di architetture di commutazione ad alte prestazioni per le reti otticheSavi, Michele <1976> 06 May 2008 (has links)
The need for high bandwidth, due to the explosion of new multi\-media-oriented IP-based services,
as well as increasing broadband access requirements is leading to the need of flexible and highly
reconfigurable optical networks.
While transmission bandwidth does not represent a limit due to the huge bandwidth provided by
optical fibers and Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) technology, the electronic
switching nodes in the core of the network represent the bottleneck in terms of speed and capacity
for the overall network.
For this reason DWDM technology must be exploited not only for data transport but also for
switching operations.
In this Ph.D. thesis solutions for photonic packet switches, a flexible alternative with respect to
circuit-switched optical networks are proposed.
In particular solutions based on devices and components that are expected to mature in the near
future are proposed, with the aim to limit the employment of complex components.
The work presented here is the result of part of the research activities performed by the Networks
Research Group at the Department of Electronics, Computer Science and Systems (DEIS) of the
University of Bologna, Italy.
In particular, the work on optical packet switching has been carried on within three relevant
research projects: the e-Photon/ONe and e-Photon/ONe+ projects, funded by the European Union
in the Sixth Framework Programme, and the national project OSATE funded by the Italian Ministry
of Education, University and Scientific Research.
The rest of the work is organized as follows.
Chapter 1 gives a brief introduction to network context and contention resolution in photonic packet
switches.
Chapter 2 presents different strategies for contention resolution in wavelength domain.
Chapter 3 illustrates a possible implementation of one of the schemes proposed in chapter 2.
Then, chapter 4 presents multi-fiber switches, which employ jointly wavelength and space domains
to solve contention.
Chapter 5 shows buffered switches, to solve contention in time domain besides wavelength domain.
Finally chapter 6 presents a cost model to compare different switch architectures in terms of cost.
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Advanced signal and receiver design for next generation OFDM systemsRosati, Stefano <1982> 23 May 2011 (has links)
This thesis deal with the design of advanced OFDM systems. Both waveform and receiver design have been treated. The main scope of the Thesis is to study, create, and propose, ideas and novel design solutions able to cope with the weaknesses and crucial aspects of modern OFDM systems.
Starting from the the transmitter side, the problem represented by low resilience to non-linear distortion has been assessed. A novel technique that considerably reduces the Peak-to-Average Power Ratio (PAPR) yielding a quasi constant signal envelope in the time domain (PAPR close to 1 dB) has been proposed.The proposed technique, named Rotation Invariant Subcarrier Mapping (RISM),is a novel scheme for subcarriers data mapping,where the symbols belonging to the modulation alphabet are not anchored, but maintain some degrees of freedom. In other words, a bit tuple is not mapped on a single point, rather it is mapped onto a geometrical locus,
which is totally or partially rotation invariant.
The final positions of the transmitted complex symbols are chosen by an iterative optimization process in order to minimize the PAPR of the resulting OFDM symbol.
Numerical results confirm that RISM makes OFDM usable even in severe non-linear channels.
Another well known problem which has been tackled is the vulnerability to synchronization errors.
Indeed in OFDM system an accurate recovery of carrier frequency and symbol timing is crucial for the proper demodulation of the received packets.
In general, timing and frequency synchronization is performed in two separate phases called PRE-FFT and POST-FFT synchronization.
Regarding the PRE-FFT phase, a novel joint symbol timing and carrier frequency synchronization algorithm has been presented.
The proposed algorithm is characterized by a very low hardware complexity, and, at the same time, it guarantees very good performance in in both AWGN and multipath channels.
Regarding the POST-FFT phase, a novel approach for both pilot structure and receiver design has been presented. In particular, a novel pilot pattern has been introduced in order to minimize the occurrence of overlaps between two pattern shifted replicas. This allows to replace conventional pilots with nulls in the frequency domain, introducing the so called Silent Pilots.
As a result, the optimal receiver turns out to be very robust against severe Rayleigh fading multipath and characterized by low complexity.
Performance of this approach has been analytically and numerically evaluated. Comparing the proposed approach with state of the art alternatives, in both AWGN and multipath fading channels, considerable performance improvements have been obtained.
The crucial problem of channel estimation has been thoroughly investigated, with particular emphasis on the decimation of the Channel Impulse Response (CIR) through the selection of the Most Significant Samples (MSSs).
In this contest our contribution is twofold, from the theoretical side, we derived lower bounds on the estimation mean-square error (MSE) performance for any MSS selection strategy,from the receiver design we proposed novel MSS selection strategies which have been shown to approach these MSE lower bounds, and outperformed the state-of-the-art alternatives.
Finally, the possibility of using of Single Carrier Frequency Division Multiple Access (SC-FDMA) in the Broadband Satellite Return Channel has been assessed.
Notably, SC-FDMA is able to improve the physical layer spectral efficiency with respect to single carrier systems, which have been used so far in the Return Channel Satellite (RCS) standards.
However, it requires a strict synchronization and it is also sensitive to phase noise of local radio frequency oscillators.
For this reason, an effective pilot tone arrangement within the SC-FDMA frame, and a novel Joint Multi-User (JMU) estimation method for the SC-FDMA, has been proposed.
As shown by numerical results, the proposed scheme manages to satisfy strict synchronization requirements and to guarantee a proper demodulation of the received signal.
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Spectrum Management and Cognitive RadiosGuidotti, Alessandro <1983> 31 May 2012 (has links)
The ever increasing demand for new services from users who want high-quality broadband services while on the move, is straining the efficiency of current spectrum allocation paradigms, leading to an overall feeling of spectrum scarcity. In order to circumvent this problem, two possible solutions are being investigated: (i) implementing new technologies capable of accessing the temporarily/locally unused bands, without interfering with the licensed services, like Cognitive Radios; (ii) release some spectrum bands thanks to new services providing higher spectral efficiency, e.g., DVB-T, and allocate them to new wireless systems. These two approaches are promising, but also pose novel coexistence and interference management challenges to deal with. In particular, the deployment of devices such as Cognitive Radio, characterized by the inherent unplanned, irregular and random locations of the network nodes, require advanced mathematical techniques in order to explicitly model their spatial distribution. In such context, the system performance and optimization are strongly dependent on this spatial configuration. On the other hand, allocating some released spectrum bands to other wireless services poses severe coexistence issues with all the pre-existing services on the same or adjacent spectrum bands.
In this thesis, these methodologies for better spectrum usage are investigated. In particular, using Stochastic Geometry theory, a novel mathematical framework is introduced for cognitive networks, providing a closed-form expression for coverage probability and a single-integral form for average downlink rate and Average Symbol Error Probability. Then, focusing on more regulatory aspects, interference challenges between DVB-T and LTE systems are analysed proposing a versatile methodology for their proper coexistence. Moreover, the studies performed inside the CEPT SE43 working group on the amount of spectrum potentially available to Cognitive Radios and an analysis of the Hidden Node problem are provided. Finally, a study on the extension of cognitive technologies to Hybrid Satellite Terrestrial Systems is proposed.
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Cognitive radio applications for enhanced spectrum efficiencyPetrini, Valeria <1984> 17 May 2013 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is the study of techniques for efficient management and use of the spectrum based on cognitive radio technology. The ability of cognitive radio technologies to adapt to the real-time conditions of its operating environment, offers the potential for more flexible use of the available spectrum. In this context, the international interest is particularly focused on the “white spaces” in the UHF band of digital terrestrial television.
Spectrum sensing and geo-location database have been considered in order to obtain information on the electromagnetic environment. Different methodologies have been considered in order to investigate spectral resources potentially available for the white space devices in the TV band. The adopted methodologies are based on the geo-location database approach used either in autonomous operation or in combination with sensing techniques.
A novel and computationally efficient methodology for the calculation of the maximum permitted white space device EIRP is then proposed. The methodology is suitable for implementation in TV white space databases.
Different Italian scenarios are analyzed in order to identify both the available spectrum and the white space device emission limits.
Finally two different applications of cognitive radio technology are considered. The first considered application is the emergency management. The attention is focused on the consideration of both cognitive and autonomic networking approaches when deploying an emergency management system. The cognitive technology is then considered in applications related to satellite systems. In particular a hybrid cognitive satellite-terrestrial is introduced and an analysis of coexistence between terrestrial and satellite networks by considering a cognitive approach is performed.
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Reliable Broadcasting and Streaming of Multimedia ContentPullano, Valentina <1983> 17 May 2013 (has links)
This thesis is focused on the study of techniques that allow to have reliable transmission of multimedia content in streaming and broadcasting applications, targeting in particular video content. The design of efficient error-control mechanisms, to enhance video transmission systems reliability, has been addressed considering cross-layer and multi-layer/multi-dimensional channel coding techniques to cope with bit errors as well as packet erasures. Mechanisms for unequal time interleaving have been designed as a viable solution to reduce the impact of errors and erasures by acting on the time diversity of the data flow, thus enhancing robustness against correlated channel impairments. In order to account for the nature of the factors which affect the physical layer channel in the evaluation of FEC schemes performances, an ad-hoc error-event modeling has been devised. In addition, the impact of error correction/protection techniques on the quality perceived by the consumers of video services applications and techniques for objective/subjective quality evaluation have been studied. The applicability and value of the proposed techniques have been tested by considering practical constraints and requirements of real system implementations.
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