Imagem da capa para Low-Power CMOS Wireless Communications A Wideband CDMA System Design
Low-Power CMOS Wireless Communications A Wideband CDMA System Design
Título:
Low-Power CMOS Wireless Communications A Wideband CDMA System Design
ISBN:
9781461554578
Autor Pessoal:
Edição:
1st ed. 1998.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1998.
Descrição Física:
XI, 275 p. online resource.
Conteúdo:
1. Introduction -- 2. Modulation, Multiple Access, and How Radio Waves Behave Indoors -- 3. System Overview: The Broadband CDMA Downlink -- 4. Transmit Architecture and The Baseband Modulator Chip -- 5. Broadband RF Transmission and Modulation -- 6. The Receiver: Analog RF Front-End -- 7. The Receiver: Baseband Analog Processing -- 8. The Receiver: Baseband Spread-Spectrum Digital Signal Processor -- 9. The Matched-Filter Correlator -- 10. Conclusions and Future Directions.
Resumo:
Low-Power CMOS Wireless Communications: A Wideband CDMA System Design focuses on the issues behind the development of a high-bandwidth, silicon complementary metal-oxide silicon (CMOS) low-power transceiver system for mobile RF wireless data communications. In the design of any RF communications system, three distinct factors must be considered: the propagation environment in question, the multiplexing and modulation of user data streams, and the complexity of hardware required to implement the desired link. None of these can be allowed to dominate. Coupling between system design and implementation is the key to simultaneously achieving high bandwidth and low power and is emphasized throughout the book. The material presented in Low-Power CMOS Wireless Communications: A Wideband CDMA System Design is the result of broadband wireless systems research done at the University of California, Berkeley. The wireless development was motivated by a much larger collaborative effort known as the Infopad Project, which was centered on developing a mobile information terminal for multimedia content - a wireless `network computer'. The desire for mobility, combined with the need to support potentially hundreds of users simultaneously accessing full-motion digital video, demanded a wireless solution that was of far lower power and higher data rate than could be provided by existing systems. That solution is the topic of this book: a case study of not only wireless systems designs, but also the implementation of such a link, down to the analog and digital circuit level.
Autor Adicionado:
Autor Corporativo Adicionado:
LANGUAGE:
Inglês