The document discusses sampling rate and communication channels. It asks what the Nyquist sampling rate would be for a signal with a bandwidth of 100 Hz. The Nyquist rate for this signal would be 200 Hz, since the sampling rate must be at least twice the highest frequency component of the signal. The document then describes a wireless communication channel model, noting the channel can be represented by a filtering function and added white Gaussian noise. It also notes the channel can be time and frequency dispersive, with phenomena like attenuation, time delay, and phase shift.
The document discusses sampling rate and communication channels. It asks what the Nyquist sampling rate would be for a signal with a bandwidth of 100 Hz. The Nyquist rate for this signal would be 200 Hz, since the sampling rate must be at least twice the highest frequency component of the signal. The document then describes a wireless communication channel model, noting the channel can be represented by a filtering function and added white Gaussian noise. It also notes the channel can be time and frequency dispersive, with phenomena like attenuation, time delay, and phase shift.
The document discusses sampling rate and communication channels. It asks what the Nyquist sampling rate would be for a signal with a bandwidth of 100 Hz. The Nyquist rate for this signal would be 200 Hz, since the sampling rate must be at least twice the highest frequency component of the signal. The document then describes a wireless communication channel model, noting the channel can be represented by a filtering function and added white Gaussian noise. It also notes the channel can be time and frequency dispersive, with phenomena like attenuation, time delay, and phase shift.
The document discusses sampling rate and communication channels. It asks what the Nyquist sampling rate would be for a signal with a bandwidth of 100 Hz. The Nyquist rate for this signal would be 200 Hz, since the sampling rate must be at least twice the highest frequency component of the signal. The document then describes a wireless communication channel model, noting the channel can be represented by a filtering function and added white Gaussian noise. It also notes the channel can be time and frequency dispersive, with phenomena like attenuation, time delay, and phase shift.
1 Mbps //1 Gbps bit duration? BW of the channel ? The communication channel itself is represented by some filtering h(t) ↔ H(f) and the addition of a white Gaussian noise denoted by Nw(t). The linear filtering: Attenuation/ Time DELAY, PHASE_SHIFT This could also be TIME AND FREQUENCY DISPERSIVE ( FADING wireless channel is a LTV system …WSSUS : Wide Sense Stationary ?? Rayleigh Ricean nakagami weibull -> we will study later) : Estmate channel Distortion-less channel; Distortion terms at harmonics of the input frequencies and sum and difference of Input frequencies