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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.
161

Effects of quantization error on the global positioning system software receiver interference mitigation

Burns, Jason R. January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
162

A comparative study of advanced multipath mitigating global positioning system receiver architectures

Kalyanaraman, Sai K. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
163

Hybrid system GMSK digital receiver implementation in real time

Koshal, Sanjiv January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
164

Multi-standard receiver for bluetooth and WLAN applications

Yoon, Ho Kwon January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
165

Compact high performance analog CMOS baseband design solutions for multistandard wireless transceivers

Park, Seok-Bae 08 August 2006 (has links)
No description available.
166

Guidelines for the Partial Area under the Summary Receiver Operating Characteristic (SROC) Curve

Fill, Roxanne 12 1900 (has links)
<p> The accuracy of a diagnostic test is often evaluated with the measures of sensitivity and specificity and the joint dependence between these two measures is captured by the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. To combine multiple testing results from studies that are assumed to follow the same underlying probability law, a smooth summary receiver operating characteristic (SROC) curve can be fitted. Moses et al. (1993) proposed a least squares approach to fit the smooth SROC curve. </p> <p> In this thesis we overview the summary measures for the ROC curve in single study data as well as the summary statistics for the SROC curves in meta-analysis. These summary statistics include, the area under the curve (AUC), Q* statistic, area swept under the curve (ASC) and the partial area under the curve (pAUC). </p> <p> Our focus, however is mainly on the partial area under the SROC curve as it is being used frequently in meta-analysis of diagnostic testing. The appeal to use the pAUC instead of the full AUC is that the partial area can be used to focus on a clinically relevant region of the SROC curve where false positive rate (FPR) is small. Simulations and considerations for the use of the summary indices of the ROC and SROC curves are presented here. </p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
167

Tracking the Mode of Operation of Multi-Function Radars

Arasaratnam, I 02 1900 (has links)
<p> One of the important objectives of a Radar Warning Receiver (RWR) aboard a tactical aircraft is to evaluate the level of threat posed by hostile radars in an extremely complex Electronic Warfare (EW) environment in reliable, robust and timely manner. For the RWR objective to be achieved, it passively collects electromagnetic signals emitted from potentially hostile radars. One class of such radar systems is the Multi-Function Radar (MFR) which presents a serious threat from the stand point of a RWR. MFRs perform multiple functions simultaneously employing complex hierarchical signal architecture. The purpose of this paper is to uncover the evolution of the operational mode (radar function) from the view point of a target carrying the RWR when provided with noisy observations and some prior knowledge about how the observed radar functions. The RWR estimates the radar's threat which is directly dependant on its current mode of operation. This paper presents a grid filter approach to estimate operational mode probabilities accurately with the aid of pre-trained Observable Operator Models (OOMs) and Hidden Markov Models (HMMs). Subsequently, the current mode of operation of a radar is estimated in the maximum a posteriori (MAP) sense. Practicality of this novel approach is tested for an EW scenario in this paper by means of a hypothetical MFR example. Finally, we conclude that the OOM-based grid filter tracks the mode of operation of a MFR more accurately than the corresponding HMM-based grid filter. </p> / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc)
168

Ultra-Wideband Channel Modeling using Singularity Expansion Method

Joshi, Gaurav Gaurang 04 May 2006 (has links)
Ultra-wideband (UWB) communications is expected to revolutionize high data-rate, short-distance wireless communications, providing data-rates in excess of 100 Mbps. However, the wireless channel distorts the transmitted signal by dispersing the signal energy over time. This degrades the output signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of a correlation based matched-filter receiver, limiting the achievable data-rate and user capacity. Most wideband channel models do not account for all the identified dispersion mechanisms namely the frequency dispersion, the resonant dispersion and the multipath dispersion. The objective of this research is to model resonant dispersion based on the Singularity Expansion Method (SEM) and provide guidelines for UWB receiver design to meet the data capacity. The original contribution of this research is a novel pole dispersion channel model that includes resonant dispersion characterization. An empirical investigation supports our claim that a correlation type matched-filter receiver using a template signal based on the pole dispersion channel model overcomes distortion related losses. Various physical mechanisms responsible for dispersion in UWB communication systems are described in detail. The applicability of the proposed dispersive channel model is evaluated using the optimal matched filter (OMF) receiver. The SEM approach, which was originally proposed for target identification using short pulse radars, offers limited benefits of due to its susceptibility to noise. A combined fuzzy-statistical approach is proposed to improve the robustness of resonant dispersion channel modeling in presence of noise. A natural extension of this doctoral research is to improve buried landmine detection as well as breast tumor detection by applying statistical and fuzzy analysis to the backscatter response. Moreover, radar target identification using UWB short pulses stands to gain tremendously from this research. / Ph. D.
169

A Multi-Constellation Multi-Frequency GNSS Software Receiver Design for Ionosphere Scintillation Studies

Peng, Senlin 31 August 2012 (has links)
Ionospheric scintillations can cause significant amplitude and/or phase fluctuations of GNSS signals. This work presents analysis results of scintillation effects on the new GPS L5 signal based on data collected using a real-time scintillation monitoring and data collection system at HAARP, Alaska. The data collection setup includes a custom narrow band front end that collects GPS L1, L2 IF samples and two reconfigurable USRP2 based RF front ends to collect wideband GPS L5 and GLONASS L1 and L2 signals. The results confirm that scintillation has a stronger impact on GPS L2 and L5 signals than on the L1 signal. Our preliminary results also show that carrier phase and amplitude scintillations on each signal are highly correlated. The amplitude and carrier phase scintillation are also correlated among the three signals. In this study, a multi-constellation multi-band GNSS software receiver has been developed based on USRP2, a general purpose radio platform. The C++ class-based software receiver were developed to process the IF data for GPS L1, L2C, and L5 and GLONASS L1 and L2 signals collected by the USRP2 front end. The front end performance is evaluated against the outputs of a high end custom front end driven by the same local oscillator and two commercial receivers, all using the same real signal sources. These results demonstrate that the USRP2 is a suitable front end for applications, such as ionosphere scintillation studies. Another major contribution of this work is the implementation of a Vector tracking loop (VTL) for robust carrier tracking. The VTL is developed based on the extended Kalman filter (EKF) with adaptive covariance matrices. Both scalar tracking loop (STL) and VTL are implemented. Once an error in the scalar loop is detected, the results from the VTL are used to assist the STL. The performance of the VTL is compared with the traditional STL with three different data sets: raw GPS RF data with short signal outages, RF data with strong scintillation impacts collected during the last solar maximum, and high dynamic data with long interval signal outages from a GPS simulator. The results confirm the performance improvement of the VTL over scintillation impacts and show that the VTL can maintain signal lock during long intervals of signal outage if the satellite ephemerides are available and the pseudorange estimation is within one code chip accuracy. The dynamic performance improvement of the VTL is verified as well. The results show the potential of robust tracking based on VTL during scintillation and interference. / Ph. D.
170

New Concepts in Front End Design for Receivers with Large, Multiband Tuning Ranges

Hasan, S. M. Shajedul 30 April 2009 (has links)
This dissertation presents new concepts in front end design for receivers with large, multiband tuning ranges. Such receivers are required to support large bandwidths (up to 10's of MHz) over very large tuning ranges (30:1 and beyond) with antennas that are usually narrowband, or which at best support multiple narrow bandwidths. Traditional techniques to integrate a single antenna with such receivers are limited in their ability to handle simultaneous channels distributed over very large tuning ranges, which is important for frequency-agile cognitive radio, surveillance, and other applications requiring wideband or multiband monitoring. Direct conversion architecture is gaining popularity due to the recent advancements in CMOS--based RFIC technology. The possibility of multiple parallel transceivers in RF CMOS suggests an approach to antenna--receiver integration using multiplexers. This dissertation describes an improved use of multiplexers to integrate antennas to receivers. First, the notion of sensitivity--constrained design is considered. In this approach, the goal is first to achieve sensitivity which is nominally dominated by external (environmental) noise, and then secondly to improve bandwidth to the maximum possible consistent with this goal. Next, a procedure is developed for designing antenna-multiplexer-preamplifier assemblies using this philosophy. It is shown that the approach can significantly increase the usable bandwidth and number of bands that can be supported by a single, traditional antenna. This performance is verified through field experiments. A prototype multiband multimode radio for public safety applications using these concepts is designed and demonstrated. / Ph. D.

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