In this paper, we propose a new approach to the adaptive MLSE receiver, which is based on the delay estimation of the paths in the fading channel. The path delays are estimated by using the known training sequence, and based on this estimation the proposed MLSE tracks not the T-spaced equivalent channel but the variations of each path in the frequency-selective channel directly. It will be shown through computer simulations that the proposed MLSE can improve the performance of the conventional MLSE receivers, when the number of paths is small.
Fumiaki MAEHARA Fumihito SASAMORI Fumio TAKAHATA
Transmitter diversity is a powerful technique to improve the transmission quality of downlink in microcellular mobile communications systems. Under cochannel interference (CCI) at the base station (BS), the transmitter diversity is not necessarily effective, because the desired-plus-interference signal power used as a criterion of downlink branch selection is not always relative to the downlink propagation condition. This paper proposes the theoretical derivation of bit error rate (BER) performance in the transmitter diversity under CCI occurring at BS, as parameters of average SIR at BS, normalized Doppler frequency, and so on. It is confirmed from the correspondence of theoretical results with simulation results that the proposed theoretical approach is applicable to the CCI environments at BS.
Hitoshi MURAI Hiromi T. YAMADA Kozo FUJII
The initial phase alternation of RZ pulses having duty cycle beyond 50% in dispersion-managed-link is found to help stabilize DM solitons transmissions. The stable soliton propagation of such wide RZ pulses should ease the difficulties designing soliton-based DWDM systems due to less spectral occupancy/channel. For the proof of concept, 40 Gbit/s WDM transmissions are numerically investigated and the initial phase alternation improved the transmission distance by the factor of 2 in the soliton-soliton interaction limited regime. The advantage of this concept has also been verified by conducting 40 Gbit/s single and 8 channels WDM transmission experiments using OTDM techniques with initial phase alternation.
Peter M. KRUMMRICH Erich GOTTWALD Nancy E. HECKER Claus-Jorg WEISKE Andreas SCHOPFLIN Andreas FARBERT Klaus KOTTEN
Channel bit rates of 40 Gbit/s are the next step after 2.5 and 10 Gbit/s in the SONET/SDH hierarchy. They enable multi Tbit/s transmission of live traffic over a single fiber. All recent optical transmission records concerning aggregate capacitiy per fiber were achieved using this technology. Comparing the limiting effects of 2.5, 10 and 40 Gbit/s system configurations reveals that 40 Gbit/s allows for the longest regenerator free distance on NZDSF. In this paper we describe transmitter and receiver designs as well as results from field trials. The first trial demonstrated a transmission of live traffic with a record aggregate capacity of 3.2 Tbit/s, whereas the second successfully demonstrated a doubling of the channel capacity to 80 Gbit/s using polarization multiplexing with automated polarization control.
Akira HIRANO Masaki ASOBE Kenji SATO Yutaka MIYAMOTO Kazushige YONENAGA Hiroshi MIYAZAWA Makoto ABE Hidehiko TAKARA Ippei SHAKE
We achieved a dispersion tolerance of 25-ps/nm at 80-Gbit/s using novel carrier-suppressed return-to-zero (CS-RZ) coding realized by duty ratio and optical multiplexing phase control. We also show that the dispersion tolerance strongly depends on the relative optical phase difference between adjacent time slots, and demonstrate 80-Gbit/s 60-km DSF transmission without dispersion compensation by using a newly-fabricated stable 80-Gbit/s OTDM transmitter.
Masataka NAKAZAWA Takashi YAMAMOTO Koichi Robert TAMURA
Progress on a single wavelength channel OTDM terabit/s transmission is described. In particular, we focus on 1.28 Tbit/s OTDM transmission over 70 km which we realized recently. A pre-chirping technique using a high speed phase modulator is emphasized to simultaneously compensate for third- and fourth-order dispersion. The input pulse width was 380 fs, and the pulse broadening after a 70 km transmission was as small as 20 fs. All 128 channels time-division-demultiplexed to 10 Gbit/s had a bit error rate of less than 110-9, in which we employed a lot of new technique for pulse generation, dispersion compensation and demultiplexing. These techniques help pave the path for OTDM technology of the 21 century.
In the current digital mobile communication that is used in the micro cellular system, a Self-Organized Dynamic Channel Assignment (DCA) Method has been proposed to use frequencies effectively. However, its characteristics and operational matters have not been reported yet. This paper takes up the TDMA/TDD system used in the current PHS system and also evaluates the characteristics and operational matters of this method through the actual operational tests. In addition, this paper aims to propose a new DCA method in order to speed up the Channel Segregation and evaluates its effects through the actual operational tests.
In software-based wireless multimedia communications systems, each mobile terminal will be able to select its best-suited transmission format according to its quality of service (QoS) and channel condition. In this paper, we focus attention on "access scheme selectability" in such a software-based system, and discuss the traffic performance improvement due to adaptive access scheme selection. Assuming a software-based TDMA/CDMA system where time division multiple access (TDMA) and direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA) schemes are flexibly selectable, we evaluate the traffic performance in terms of average delay with a typical multimedia service model to be supported in future wireless communications systems. In the TDMA/CDMA system, how to determine an appropriate access scheme for a user is a key issue. Therefore, we discuss the selection algorithm for efficiently supporting heterogeneous multimedia services. Our computer simulation results show that the software-based system with a simple access scheme selection algorithm can significantly improve the traffic performance as compared with conventional hardware-based systems.
Hitoshi YOSHINO Hiroshi SUZUKI
This paper describes the results of a series of laboratory experiments for performance evaluations of our proposed Maximum Likelihood Sequence Estimation (MLSE) based interference canceller, the Interference Canceling Equalizer (ICE), which can cancel both co-channel interference (CCI) and inter-symbol interference (ISI). To verify the feasibility of ICE for the Japanese cellular communications system, a standard of which has been released under the name of Personal Digital Cellular (PDC) system, a prototype system was constructed using 27 TI TMS320C40 Digital Signal Processor (DSP) chips. The ICE prototype works in real-time on the PDC air interface, major specifications of which are π/4 QDPSK 21 k symbols/s 3-channel time-division multiple-access (TDMA). Two-branch diversity reception is used to enhance the signal detection performance of ICE. In the experiments, BER performances were evaluated using the prototype system. Under a single-path Rayleigh fading and a single CCI condition, the ICE receiver attains the BER of less than 310-2 with the negative values of the average CIR: for fD = 5 Hz and 40 Hz, the average CIR more than -20 dB and -10 dB, respectively. Under a double-path Rayleigh fading and a single CCI condition, the ICE receiver attains the BER of less than 1.510-2 with the negative values of the average CIR: for fD = 5 Hz and 40 Hz, the average CIR more than -20 dB and -10 dB, respectively. The laboratory test results suggest that the ICE receiver has potential for system capacity enhancement.
Kazuhiro GOKYU Ken-ichi BABA Masayuki MURATA
In this paper, we propose path accommodation methods for unidirectional rings based on an optical compression time-division multiplexing (OCTDM) technology. We first derive a theoretical lower bound on the numbers of slots and frames, in order to allocate all paths among nodes. Three path accommodation algorithms for the all-optical access are next proposed to achieve the lower bound as closely as possible. Path splitting is next considered to improve the traffic accommodation. Finally, we analyze the packet delay time for given numbers of slots/frames, which are decided by our proposed algorithms. Numerical examples are also shown to examine the effectiveness of our proposed algorithms including path accommodation and path splitting methods.
Designing control and robotic systems as autonomous decentralized systems introduces a new degree of flexibility in the manufacturing and in the application of such systems. This flexibility is required for the systems to work in environments that are not totally predictable and that can change dynamically. In this paper, we present a new concept for real-time communication that supports this flexibility while still preserving real-time guarantees for hard real-time communication. The concept is designed to work on multiple-access busses. In particular, we consider its application on wireless local area networks and field-busses. The concept addresses requirements of hard-real time, soft real-time and non real-time communication. For this, we extend the TDMA (time- division multiple-access) approach for time-triggered hard-real time communication by the concept of shared channels that support event-triggered communication and coexist with hard real-time channels. A first implementation of concept has been carried out in the context of the CAN-bus.
Wen-Tsuen CHEN Wen-Tsung LIN Che-Ming LU
This work presents a scalable and high performance prediction protocol for optical networks. In the proposed protocol, we develop a mathematical model to maintain the stability of a network system by prediction based on the traffic temporal locality property. All the critical factors, including transceiver tuning time, propagation delay, and processing time for dealing with control packets, are considered in the proposed prediction protocol. Furthermore, our protocol can resolve the bottlenecks attributed to control signaling and electronics processing. The performance evaluation reveals that the proposed scheme can yield the higher bandwidth efficiency and incur a lower packet delay than those of the TDM and conventional reservation schemes. Also, the proposed protocol can flexibly support any scaled network system such as MANs or LANs.
Takao MATSUMOTO Kazuo KIMURA Kazuhiro NOGUCHI Masahiko JINNO
Optical time- and wavelength-domain paths in future very-high-speed optical communications networks are discussed taking into account trends in current optical transmission and optical signal processing technologies. It is important to investigate optical STM cross-connect systems for time-domain paths in the earlier research phase to ensure the deployment of optical cross-connect technology. The configuration of an optical cross-connect system and the issues that need to be investigated are presented. We also report, for the first time, a preliminary experiment of an optical STM cross-connect system, using 20 Gbit/s optical signals.
Comparison of TDM and WDM for backbone ring network application is discussed from the perspective of system economizing. A critical advantage that WDM can provide is the optical pass-through function at a node having a relatively small drop and insert bandwidth. Circumstances where WDM is more advantageous than TDM are frequent especially in center-node type ring networks.
In this paper, we propose a polling-based scheduling strategy for multiple access control in wireless ATM networks (POSTMAN). A pure centrally controlled polling scheme is adopted in our protocol, therefore no contention channel is needed. The POSTMAN protocol assumes a TDMA/TDD frame format, by which wireless bandwidth is allocated flexibly both among multiple mobile terminals and between downlink and uplink channels. When polling the uplink traffic, the POSTMAN needs no priori traffic model to predict the cell arrivals. Instead, a token queue and an ABR buffer status table are used in the base station. Simulation results show that the POSTMAN protocol is robust in most cases and can work steadily under very high network load conditions.
Norio TAMAKI Hideaki KIMURA Ryuichi WATANABE
Minimizing the guard time, Tguard, in the TCM-TDMA PDS scheme is essential in maximizing TCM transmission efficiency. As a replacement for the commonly adopted worst-case approach to TCM-TDMA PDS system estimation, this paper proposes a statistical approach. The level distributions of losses and n-th order Fresnel reflections are determined from published measurements. The proposed approach estimates the reflection of the optical access network.
Hafiz Md. HASAN BABU Tsutomu SASAO
This paper considers methods to design multiple-output networks based on decision diagrams (DDs). TDM (time-division multiplexing) systems transmit several signals on a single line. These methods reduce: 1) hardware; 2) logic levels; and 3) pins. In the TDM realizations, we consider three types of DDs: shared binary decision digrams (SBDDs), shared multiple-valued decision diagrams (SMDDs), and shared multi-terminal multiple-valued decision diagrams (SMTMDDs). In the network, each non-terminal node of a DD is realized by a multiplexer (MUX). We propose heuristic algorithms to derive SMTMDDs from SBDDs. We compare the number of non-terminal nodes in SBDDs, SMDDs, and SMTMDDs. For nrm n, log n, and for many other benchmark functions, SMTMDD-based realizations are more economical than other ones, where nrm n is a (2n)-input (n1)-output function computing (X2+Y2)+0.5, log n is an n-input n-output function computing (2n1)log(x1)/nlog2, and a denotes the largest integer not greater than a.
Nobuo FUNABIKI Junji KITAMICHI
A novel combinatorial optimization algorithm called "Gradual neural network (GNN)" is presented for NP-complete broadcast scheduling problems in packet radio (PR) networks. A PR network provides data communications services to a set of geographically distributed nodes through a common radio channel. A time division multiple access (TDMA) protocol is adopted for conflict-free communications, where packets are transmitted in repetition of fixed-length time-slots called a TDMA cycle. Given a PR network, the goal of GNN is to find a TDMA cycle with the minimum delay time for each node to broadcast packets. GNN for the N-node-M-slot TDMA cycle problem consists of a neural network with N M binary neurons and a gradual expansion scheme. The neural network not only satisfies the constraints but also maximizes transmissions by two energy functions, whereas the gradual expansion scheme minimizes the cycle length by gradually expanding the size of the neural network. The performance is evaluated through extensive simulations in benchmark instances and in geometric graph instances with up to 1000 vertices, where GNN always finds better TDMA cycles than existing algorithms. The result in this paper supports the credibility of our GNN algorithm for a class of combinatorial optimization problems.
John D. MOORES Jeff KORN Katherine L. HALL Steven G. FINN Kristin A. RAUSCHENBACH
Recent work in the area of ultrafast optical time-division multiplexed (OTDM) networking at MIT Lincoln Laboratory is presented. A scalable helical local area network or HLAN architecture, presented elsewhere as an architecture well-suited to ultrafast OTDM LANs and MANs, is considered in the context of wide area networking. Two issues arise in scaling HLAN to the wide area. The first is protocol extension, and the second is supporting the required bandwidth on the long-haul links. In this paper we discuss these challenges and describe progress made in both architecture and technologies required for scaling HLAN to the wide area.
Masanori OGAWARA Atsushi HIRAMATSU Jun NISHIKIDO Masayuki YANAGIYA Masato TSUKADA Ken-ichi YUKIMATSU
This paper describes the implementation and demonstration of local networks for the hyper-media photonic information network (HM-PIN), a candidate for the information service platform offering broadcast and telecommunication services. In addition, the feasibility of the HM-PIN is also demonstrated using prototype local network systems. This local network adopts architecture based on wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) and broadcast-and-select (B&S) switching, and supports all HM-PIN services except inter-local-network communication. The major issues of this proposed network are the technologies that support many broadcast channels and reduce channel selection cost. This paper also considers the combination of WDM technology and three alternatives: electrical TDM, subcarrier multiplexing (SCM or electrical FDM), and optical TDM (O-TDM). Three 128 ch (8 wavelengths 16 channels) WDM B&S prototype systems are built to demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed HM-PIN. In WDM/SCM, 30 and 20 Mb/s channels are realized as 16-QAM and 64-QAM, and 155 Mb/s channels are realized by WDM/TDM. Moreover, these three prototypes were connected to form a small HM-PIN and applications such as video distribution and IP datagram cut-through are demonstrated. Furthermore, the delay and throughput of the HM-PIN are evaluated by connecting a local network to a 200-km WDM-ring backbone network. Our discussions and demonstrations confirm the impact and feasibility of the proposed hyper-media photonic information network.