>
Fa   |   Ar   |   En
   Information-theoretic analysis of underwater acoustic OFDM systems in highly dispersive channels  
   
نویسنده socheleau f.-x. ,stojanovic m. ,laot c. ,passerieux j.-m.
منبع journal of electrical and computer engineering - 2012 - شماره : 0
چکیده    This paper investigates the signal-to-interference ratio and the achievable rates of underwater acoustic (ua) ofdm systems over channels where time and frequency dispersion are high enough that (i) neither the transmitter nor the receiver can have a priori knowledge of the channel state information and (ii) intersymbol/intercarrier interference (isi/ici) cannot be neglected in the information-theoretic treatment. the goal of this study is to obtain a better understanding of the interplay between interference and the achievable transmission rates. expressions for these rates take into account the cross-channels established by the isi/ici and are based on lower bounds on mutual information that assume independent and identically distributed input data symbols. in agreement with recent statistical analyses of experimental shallow-water data,the channel is modeled as a multivariate rician fading process with a slowly time-varying mean and with potentially correlated scatterers,which is more general than the common wide-sense stationary uncorrelated scattering model. numerical assessments on real ua channels with spread factors around 10 -1 show that reliable ofdm transmissions at 2 to 4 bits/sec/hz are achievable provided an average signal-to-noise ratio of 15 to 20 db. © 2012 francois-xavier socheleau et al.
آدرس ensta bretagne,umr cnrs 6285 lab-sticc,université européenne de bretagne,2 rue francois verny, France, department of electrical and computer engineering,northeastern university,boston, United States, institut mines-télécom,telecom bretagne,umr cnrs 6285 lab-sticc,technopôle brest iroise-cs 83818, France, general sonar studies group,thales underwater systems,525 route des dolines, France
 
     
   
Authors
  
 
 

Copyright 2023
Islamic World Science Citation Center
All Rights Reserved