Fundamentals of Wireless Communication
- 13h 49m
- David Tse, Pramod Viswanath
- Cambridge University Press
- 2005
The past decade has seen many advances in physical-layer wireless communication theory and their implementation in wireless systems. This textbook takes a unified view of the fundamentals of wireless communication and explains the web of concepts underpinning these advances at a level accessible to an audience with a basic background in probability and digital communication. Topics covered include MIMO(multiple input multiple output) communication, space-time coding, opportunistic communication, OFDM and CDMA. The concepts are illustrated using many examples from wireless systems such as GSM, IS-95 (CDMA), IS-856 (1× EV-DO), Flash OFDM and ArrayComm SDMA systems. Particular emphasis is placed on the interplay between concepts and their implementation in systems. An abundant supply of exercises and figures reinforce the material in the text. This book is intended for use on graduate courses in electrical and computer engineering and will also be of great interest to practicing engineers.
About the Authors
David Tse is a professor at the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California at Berkeley.
Pramod Viswanath is an assistant professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
In this Book
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Introduction
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The Wireless Channel
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Point-to-Point Communication—Detection, Diversity, and Channel Uncertainty
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Cellular Systems—Multiple Access and Interference Management
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Capacity of Wireless Channels
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Multiuser Capacity and Opportunistic Communication
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MIMO I—Spatial Multiplexing and Channel Modeling
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MIMO II—Capacity And Multiplexing Architectures
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MIMO III—Diversity–Multiplexing Tradeoff and Universal Space-Time Codes
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MIMO IV—Multiuser Communication
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References