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Physical principles of wireless communications /

"Preface to the second edition The technology of wireless communications is changing rapidly. In the less than 5 years that have elapsed since the writing of the first edition of this book "smart phones" with internet access have become ubiquitous making it appropriate to add material...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Granatstein, V. L. (Victor L.), 1935-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press, ©2012.
Edición:Second edition.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo (Requiere registro previo con correo institucional)

MARC

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100 1 |a Granatstein, V. L.  |q (Victor L.),  |d 1935- 
245 1 0 |a Physical principles of wireless communications /  |c Victor L. Granatstein. 
250 |a Second edition. 
260 |a Boca Raton, FL :  |b CRC Press,  |c ©2012. 
300 |a 1 online resource 
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
520 3 |a "Preface to the second edition The technology of wireless communications is changing rapidly. In the less than 5 years that have elapsed since the writing of the first edition of this book "smart phones" with internet access have become ubiquitous making it appropriate to add material in the first chapter describing third generation (3G) and fourth generation (4G) cell phone systems. Beyond that natural update, I have received many suggestions for adding new material on topics that were treated lightly or omitted in the first edition. Primary among these were discussions of the relation between the basic laws of quantum and relativistic physics and the engineering of modern wireless communication systems. A section has been added describing Planck's Law of Blackbody Radiation. This has been followed by a detailed description of the assumptions made to derive from this law the engineering estimates of noise pickup by a communications receiver. Discussions of both General Relativity and Special Relativity have been expanded in the context of synchronizing clocks on the earth and in a satellite. A Global Positioning System (GPS) cannot be successfully designed without taking relativistic effects into account. The chapter on antennas has been made more complete by adding a section on wire loop antennas. In the chapter on statistical design, the discusson of shadowing correlations and their effect on cell phone system design has been expanded"--  |c Provided by publisher 
505 0 |6 880-01  |a Front Cover; Dedication; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; Preface to the First Edition; Preface to the Second Edition; The Author; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1: An Introduction to Modern Wireless Communications; Chapter 2: Noise in Wireless Communications; Chapter 3: Antennas; Chapter 4: Antenna Arrays; Chapter 5: Radio Frequency (RF) Wave Propagation; Chapter 6: Statistical Considerations in Designing Cell Phone Systems and Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs); Chapter 7: Tropospheric and Ionospheric Effects in Long-Range Communications; Chapter 8: Satellite Communications (SATCOM). 
505 8 |a Appendix AAppendix B; Appendix C; Nomenclature; Back Cover. 
590 |a O'Reilly  |b O'Reilly Online Learning: Academic/Public Library Edition 
650 0 |a Wireless communication systems. 
650 6 |a Transmission sans fil. 
650 7 |a TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING  |x Telecommunications.  |2 bisacsh 
650 7 |a TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING  |x Mobile & Wireless Communications.  |2 bisacsh 
650 7 |a TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING  |x Mechanical.  |2 bisacsh 
650 7 |a Wireless communication systems.  |2 fast  |0 (OCoLC)fst01176209 
776 0 8 |i Print version:  |a Granatstein, V.L. (Victor L.), 1935-  |t Physical principles of wireless communications.  |b 2nd ed.  |d Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press, ©2012  |z 9781439878972  |w (DLC) 2011050847  |w (OCoLC)761380942 
856 4 0 |u https://learning.oreilly.com/library/view/~/9781439879009/?ar  |z Texto completo (Requiere registro previo con correo institucional) 
880 0 |6 505-01/(S  |a <P><STRONG>An Introduction to Modern Wireless Communications <BR></STRONG>A Brief History of Wireless Communications <BR> Faraday, Maxwell, and Hertz: The Discovery of Electromagnetic Waves <BR> Guglielmo Marconi, Inventor of Wireless Communications <BR> Developments in the Vacuum Electronics Era (1906 to 1947) <BR> The Modern Era in Wireless Communications (1947 to the Present) <BR>Basic Concepts<BR> Information Capacity of a Communication Channel <BR> Antenna Fundamentals <BR> The Basic Layout of a Wireless Communications System <BR> Decibels and Link Budgets <BR>Characteristics of Some Modern Communication Systems <BR> Mobile Communications (Frequency Division Multiple Access, FDMA, and Trunking) <BR> Analog Cell Phone Systems <BR> Digital Cell Phone Systems (Time Division Multiple Access, TDMA, and Code Division Multiple Access, CDMA) <BR> Overview of Past, Present, and Future Cell Phone Systems<BR> Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) of Computers <BR> SATCOM Systems <BR>The Plan of This Book <BR>Problems <BR>Bibliography</P><P></P><STRONG><P>Noise in Wireless Communications <BR></STRONG>Fundamental Noise Concepts <BR> Radiation Resistance and Antenna Efficiency <BR> Nyquist Noise Theorem, Antenna Temperature, and Receiver Noise <BR> Equivalent Circuit of Antenna and Receiver for Calculating Noise <BR>Contributions to Antenna Temperature <BR> Thermal Sources of Noise and Blackbody Radiation<BR> Cosmic Noise <BR> Atmospheric Noise<BR> Big Bang Noise (Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation) <BR> Noise Attenuation <BR>Noise in Specific Systems <BR> Noise in Pagers <BR> Noise in Cell Phones <BR> Noise in Millimeter-Wave SATCOM <BR>Problems <BR>Bibliography</P><P></P><STRONG><P>Antennas <BR></STRONG>Brief Review of Electromagnetism <BR> Maxwell's Equations and Boundary Conditions <BR> Vector Potential, and the Inhomogeneous Helmholtz Equation <BR>Radiation from a Hertzian Dipole <BR> Solution of the Inhomogeneous Helmholtz Equation in the Vector Potential A <BR> Near Fields and Far Fields of a Hertzian Dipole<BR> Basic Antenna Parameters <BR> Directive Gain, D(f, q); Directivity, D; and Gain, G <BR> Radiation Resistance of a Hertzian Dipole Antenna <BR> Electrically Short Dipole Antenna (Length <<λ) <BR> Small Loop Antennas <BR>Receiving Antennas, Polarization, and Aperture Antennas <BR> Universal Relationship between Gain and Effective Area <BR> Friis Transmission Formula <BR> Polarization Mismatch <BR> A Brief Treatment of Aperture Antennas <BR>Thin-Wire Dipole Antennas <BR> General Analysis of Thin-Wire Dipole Antennas <BR> The Half-Wave Dipole <BR>Problems <BR>Bibliography<BR><BR><STRONG>Antenna Arrays <BR></STRONG>Omnidirectional Radiation Pattern in the Horizontal Plane with Vertical Focusing <BR> Arrays of Half-Wave Dipoles <BR> Colinear Arrays <BR> Colinear arrays with Equal Incremental Phase Advance <BR> Elevation Control with a Phased Colinear Antenna Array <BR>Antennas Displaced in the Horizontal Plane <BR> Radiation Pattern of Two Horizontally Displaced Dipoles <BR> Broadside Arrays <BR> Endfire Arrays <BR> Smart Antenna Arrays <BR>Image Antennas <BR> The Principle of Images <BR> Quarter-Wave Monopole above a Conducting Plane<BR> Antennas for Handheld Cell Phones <BR> Half-Wave Dipoles and Reflectors <BR>Rectangular Microstrip Patch Antennas <BR> The TM10 Microstrip Patch Cavity <BR> Duality in Maxwell's Equations and Radiation from a Slot <BR> Radiation from the Edges of a Microstrip Cavity <BR> Array of Microstrip Patch Antennas <BR>Problems <BR>Bibliography</P><P></P><STRONG><P>Radio Frequency (RF) Wave Propagation <BR></STRONG>Some Simple Models of Path Loss in Radio Frequency (RF) Wave Propagation <BR> Free Space Propagation <BR> Laws of Reflection and Refraction at a Planar Boundary<BR> Effect of Surface Roughness <BR> Plane Earth Propagation Model <BR>Diffraction over Single and Multiple Obstructions <BR> Diffraction by a Single Knife Edge <BR> Deygout Method of Approximately Treating Multiple Diffracting Edges <BR> The Causebrook Correction to the Deygout Method <BR>Wave Propagation in an Urban Environment <BR> The Delisle/Egli Empirical Expression for Path Loss <BR> The Flat-Edge Model for Path Loss from the Base Station to the Final Street <BR> Ikegami Model of Excess Path Loss in the Final Street <BR> The Walfisch-Bertoni Analysis of the Parametric Dependence of Path Loss <BR>Problems <BR>Bibliography</P><P></P><STRONG><P>Statistical Considerations In Designing Cell Phone Systems and Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs)<BR></STRONG>A Brief Review of Statistical Analysis<BR> Random Variables <BR> Random Processes <BR>Shadowing <BR> The Log-Normal Probability Distribution Function <BR> The Complementary Cumulative Normal Distribution Function (Q Function) <BR> Calculating Margin and Probability of Call Completion <BR> Probability of Call Completion Averaged over a Cell <BR> Additional Signal Loss from Propagating into Buildings <BR> Shadowing Autocorrelation (Serial Correlation) <BR> Shadowing Cross-Correlation <BR>Slow and Fast Fading <BR> Slow Fading <BR> Rayleigh Fading <BR> Margin to Allow for Both Shadowing and Rayleigh Fading <BR&g. 
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