Search results for "Channel gain"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Estimation of the Velocity of a Walking Person in Non-Stationary Indoor Environments from the Received RF Signal
2018
Accurate estimation of the time-variant (TV) velocity, i.e., TV speed and TV direction of motion, of walking persons in indoor environment is of great importance in a variety of wireless indoor applications. This paper presents a novel method for estimating the velocity of a walking person in three-dimensional indoor environments, which are assumed to be equipped with a distributed 3 × 3 multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) system. The approach estimates the TV speed, TV vertical angle-of-motion (VAOM), and TV horizontal angle-of-motion (HAOM) by fitting the spectrogram of the complex channel gain of a non-stationary indoor channel model to the spectrogram obtained from the received radio …
Modeling of Vehicle-to-Vehicle Channels in the Presence of Moving Scatterers
2012
In this paper, we derive a vehicle-to-vehicle~(V2V) channel model assuming a typical propagation scenario in which the local scatterers move with random velocities in random directions. The complex channel gain of the proposed V2V channel model is provided. Subsequently, for different scatterer velocity distributions, the corresponding autocorrelation functions~(ACFs) are derived, illustrated, and compared with the classical ACF derived under the assumption of fixed scatterers. Furthermore, under specific conditions, highly accurate approximations for the ACFs are provided in closed form. Since the proposed V2V channel model covers several communication scenarios as special cases, including…
Channel Gain Cartography via Mixture of Experts
2020
In order to estimate the channel gain (CG) between the locations of an arbitrary transceiver pair across a geographic area of interest, CG maps can be constructed from spatially distributed sensor measurements. Most approaches to build such spectrum maps are location-based, meaning that the input variable to the estimating function is a pair of spatial locations. The performance of such maps depends critically on the ability of the sensors to determine their positions, which may be drastically impaired if the positioning pilot signals are affected by multi-path channels. An alternative location-free approach was recently proposed for spectrum power maps, where the input variable to the maps…