000 03065cam a2200277 a 4500
001 18019087
005 20150526143949.0
008 140125t2014 flua frb 001 0 eng d
020 _a9781466598072 (hardback)
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_dDLC
_dEG-ScBUE
082 0 0 _a621.38456
_222
_bMIM
245 0 0 _aMIMO processing for 4G and beyond :
_bfundamentals and evolution /
_cedited by Mario Marques da Silva, Francisco A. Monteiro.
260 _aBoca Raton :
_bCRC Press / Taylor & Francis Group,
_cc.2014.
300 _axviii, 533 p. :
_bill. ;
_c24 cm.
500 _aIndex : p. 515-533.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
520 _a"Multiple-input multiple-output was from the beginning a disruptive idea which opened horizons to up-until-then unimaginable data rates and system capacities in wireless systems. This book offers a fresh look at MIMO signal processing, namely its detection (including in the frequency domain) and precoding. It also looks at its combination with OFDM, UWB and CDMA and the impact at the system-level. MIMO remains a pillar of high-speed systems beyond 4G which incorporate massive MIMO and network coding at the physical layer and these topics are also addressed. The book brings together some highly cited authors from first-class institutions. "--
520 _a"Preface: Evolution of Wireless Systems--The Roots of MIMO and its Future In the transmission of information over a wireless channel the channel is modeled classically as a linear system black box with an input and output, that is, a single input and a single output (SISO). The input is the connection point from the power amplifier of the transmitter to the transmitting antenna terminal and the output is the connection point from the receiving antenna terminal to the radio frequency (RF) front-end filter of the receiver. The antennas are modeled as a structure that radiates EM waves that propagate through space. The simplest such antenna structure is a radiating electric dipole element. With the presence of multipath propagation in the channel it becomes evident that the electric field at the receiver location undergoes variations in amplitude over distances in space in the order of a wavelength. As a result, variations of the classical wireless channel were employed, where multiple receiving antenna elements were introduced, or in other words, antenna structures with multiple interconnection points to the receiver. These antennas were designed to achieve the so-called receiver diversity. The channel could then be modeled as having a single input and multiple outputs, or in the current terminology SIMO (single input multiple output). Classical receiver techniques to process the multiple outputs were referred to as combining techniques"--
650 7 _aMIMO systems.
_2BUEsh
_923368
651 _2BUEsh
653 _bENGGEN
_bENGELC
_cMay2015
655 _vreading book
_934232
700 1 _aSilva, Mario Marques da,
_eeditor.
_937985
700 1 _aMonteiro, Francisco A.,
_eeditor.
_937986
942 _2ddc
_k621.38456 MIM
999 _c19343
_d19315