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    The Vienna LTE-Advanced Simulators: Up and Downlink, Link and System Level Simulation (Repost)

    Posted By: step778
    The Vienna LTE-Advanced Simulators: Up and Downlink, Link and System Level Simulation (Repost)

    Markus Rupp, Stefan Schwarz, Martin Taranetz, "The Vienna LTE-Advanced Simulators: Up and Downlink, Link and System Level Simulation"
    English | 2016 | pages: 383 | ISBN: 9811006164 | PDF | 16,8 mb

    This book introduces
    the Vienna Simulator Suite for 3rd-Generation Partnership Project
    (3GPP)-compatible Long Term Evolution-Advanced (LTE-A) simulators and presents
    applications to demonstrate their uses for describing, designing, and optimizing
    wireless cellular LTE-A networks.
    Part One addresses LTE
    and LTE-A link level techniques. As there has been high demand for the downlink
    (DL) simulator, it constitutes the central focus of the majority of the
    chapters. This part of the book reports on relevant highlights, including
    single-user (SU), multi-user (MU) and single-input-single-output (SISO) as well
    as multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) transmissions. Furthermore, it
    summarizes the optimal pilot pattern for high-speed communications as well as
    different synchronization issues. One chapter is devoted to experiments that
    show how the link level simulator can provide input to a testbed. This section
    also uses measurements to present and validate fundamental results on
    orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) transmissions that are not
    limited to LTE-A. One chapter exclusively deals with the newest tool, the
    uplink (UL) link level simulator, and presents cutting-edge results.
    In turn, Part Two
    focuses on system-level simulations. From early on, system-level simulations have
    been in high demand, as people are naturally seeking answers when scenarios
    with numerous base stations and hundreds of users are investigated. This part
    not only explains how mathematical abstraction can be employed to speed up
    simulations by several hundred times without sacrificing precision, but also
    illustrates new theories on how to abstract large urban heterogeneous networks
    with indoor small cells. It also reports on advanced applications such as train
    and car transmissions to demonstrate the tools’ capabilities.
     

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