This book is an accessible introduction to the theory of space-time wireless communications. The book is an ideal introduction to this rapidly growing field for graduate students and for practitioners in the wireless industry. Homework problems and other supporting material are available on a companion website.
Wireless networks are under constant pressure to provide ever higher data rates to increasing numbers of users with greater reliability. Space-time processing technology, which uses multiple antennas and sophisticated signal processing techniques, is a powerful new tool for improving system performance. The technology already features in the UMTS and CDMA2000 mobile standards. This book is an accessible introduction to the theory of space-time wireless communications. The authors discuss the basics of space-time propagation, space-time channels, channel capacity, spatial diversity and space-time coding. They highlight important trade-offs in the design of practical systems and cover advanced topics such as space-time OFDM and spread-spectrum modulation, co-channel interference cancellation, and multiuser MIMO. The book is an ideal introduction to this rapidly growing field for graduate students taking courses on wireless communications and for practitioners in the wireless industry. Homework problems and other supporting material are available on a companion website.
Arogyaswami Paulraj received his PhD from the Indian Institute of Technology and is a Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. He is the author of over 250 research papers and holds eight patents. He has held several positions in industry, including Chief Technology Officer of Iospan Wireless Inc. He is a Fellow of the IEEE and a member of the Indian National Academy of Engineering. Rohit Nabar is a Research Assistant in the Smart Antennas Research Group in the Electrical Engineering Department at Stanford University. Dhananjay Gore is a Research Assistant in the Smart Antennas Research Group in the Electrical Engineering Department at Stanford University.
1. Introduction; 2. Space-time propagation; 3. Space-time channel and signal models; 4. Capacity of space-time channels; 5. Spatial diversity; 6. Space-time coding without channel knowledge at the transmitter; 7. Space-time receivers; 8. Exploiting channel knowledge at the receiver; 9. Space-time OFDM and spread spectrum modulation; 10. MIMO-multiuser; 11. Space-time co-channel interference mitigation; 12. Performance limits and tradeoffs in MIMO channels.
An accessible introduction to the theory of space-time wireless communications.
An accessible introduction to the theory of space-time wireless communications.
This book is an accessible introduction to the theory of space-time wireless communications. The book is an ideal introduction to this rapidly growing field for graduate students and for practitioners in the wireless industry. Homework problems and other supporting material are available on a companion website.
This book is an accessible introduction to the theory of space-time wireless communications. The book is an ideal introduction to this rapidly growing field for graduate students and for practitioners in the wireless industry. Homework problems and other supporting material are available on a companion website.