05419nam 2200697Ia 450 991081254430332120240314021821.01-118-62542-01-118-64905-2(CKB)2670000000401984(EBL)1323952(OCoLC)854977096(SSID)ssj0000999770(PQKBManifestationID)11634983(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000999770(PQKBWorkID)10942851(PQKB)10527216(MiAaPQ)EBC1323952(Au-PeEL)EBL1323952(CaPaEBR)ebr10738693(CaONFJC)MIL507229(PPN)185870457(EXLCZ)99267000000040198420111102d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrWireless telecommunication systems[electronic resource] /Michel Terre, Mylene Pischella, Emmanuelle Vivier1st ed.Hoboken, NJ John Wiley and Sons20131 online resource (226 p.)Networks and telecommunications seriesDescription based upon print version of record.1-299-75978-5 1-84821-543-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Title Page; Contents; Foreword; Preface; Chapter 1. Radio Propagation; 1.1. Free-space loss link budget and capacity; 1.2. Link budget and free-space loss; 1.3. Linear expression of the Okumura-Hata model; 1.4. Frequency, distance and propagation model; 1.5. Link budget and diffraction; 1.6. Link budget and refraction; 1.7. Link budget and diffusion; 1.8. Frequency and time selectivity; 1.9. Doppler effect; Chapter 2. F/TDMA and GSM; 2.1. Maximum transmitter-receiver distance; 2.2. Extended maximum transmitter-receiver distance2.3. Reuse distance, interference reduction factor K and regular pattern2.4. Radio resources dimensioning in GSM; 2.5. Link budget in an isolated GSM cell; 2.6. Deployment of a GSM network along a highway; 2.7. GSM network dimensioning and planning in a rural area; 2.8. GSM network dimensioning and planning in an urban area; 2.9. SMS transmission in a GSM network; 2.10. Frequency reuse pattern determination; 2.11. Traffic and Erlang for GSM cell dimensioning; 2.12. Signal to noise plus interference ratio; Chapter 3. CDMA and UMTS; 3.1. Spreading and CDMA3.2. Hadamard spreading codes: a perfect orthogonality between the users?3.3. Relation between Eb/N0 and the reception threshold in UMTS networks; 3.4. Required number of codes in CDMA; 3.5. UMTS link budget; 3.6. Cell breathing in UMTS networks; 3.7. Intersite distance calculation in UMTS networks for different frequency reuse patterns; 3.8. Case study in UMTS networks; Chapter 4. OFDM and LTE; 4.1. Useful throughput of an OFDM waveform; 4.2. OFDM and PAPR; 4.3. Frequency selectivity and OFDM dimensioning; 4.4. OFDM dimensioning4.5. OFDM dimensioning for 4G networks and data rate evaluations4.6. LTE data rates evaluation; 4.7. LTE link budget; 4.8. LTE link budget taking into account the number of users; 4.9. Modulation-coding scheme relation, spectral efficiency and SINR in LTE networks; Chapter 5. MIMO and Beamforming; 5.1. Beamforming and signal-to-noise ratio; 5.2. Space diversity and chi-square distribution; 5.3. MIMO and capacity; Chapter 6. UWB; 6.1. Impulse UWB; 6.2. UWB and OFDM; 6.3. Link budget for UWB transmission; Chapter 7. Synchronization; 7.1. Cramer-Rao bound; 7.2. Modified Cramer-Rao bound7.3. Constant parameter estimation7.4. Radio burst synchronization; 7.5. Phase estimation for QPSK modulation; Chapter 8. Digital Communications Fundamentals; 8.1. Review of signal processing for signal-to-noise ratio; 8.2. Review of digital modulations; 8.3. Review of equalization; 8.4. Signal-to-noise ratio estimation; 8.5. ASK 2 modulation error probability; 8.6. Spectral occupancy, symbol rate and binary throughput; 8.7. Comparison of two linear digital modulations; 8.8. Comparison of two-PSK modulation and power evaluations; 8.9. Zero-forcing linear equalization8.10. Minimum mean square error linear equalization Wireless telecommunication systems generate a huge amount of interest. In the last two decades, these systems have experienced at least three major technological leaps, and it has become impossible to imagine how society was organized without them. In this book, we propose a macroscopic approach on wireless systems, and aim at answering key questions about power, data rates, multiple access, cellular engineering and access networks architectures.We present a series of solved problems, whose objective is to establish the main elements of a global link budget in several radiocommunicatiISTEWireless communication systemsTelecommunication systemsWireless communication systems.Telecommunication systems.004.6Terre Michel1595097Pischella Mylene860798Vivier Emmanuelle1595098MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910812544303321Wireless telecommunication systems3915897UNINA