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[Keyword] beamwidth(4hit)

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  • A Directional Noise Suppressor with a Specified Constant Beamwidth

    Ryoji MIYAHARA  Akihiko SUGIYAMA  

     
    PAPER-Digital Signal Processing

      Vol:
    E101-A No:10
      Page(s):
    1616-1624

    This paper proposes a directional noise suppressor with a specified constant beamwidth for directional interferences and diffuse noise. A directional gain is calculated based on interchannel phase difference and combined with a spectral gain commonly used in single-channel noise suppressors. The beamwidth can be specified as passband edges of the directional gain. In order to implement frequency-independent constant beamwidth, frequency-proportionate directional gains are defined for different frequencies as a constraint. Evaluation with signals recorded by a commercial PC demonstrates good agreement between the theoretical and the measured directivity. The signal-to-noise ratio improvement and the PESQ score for the enhanced signal are improved by 24.4dB and 0.3 over a conventional noise suppressor. In a speech recognition scenario, the proposed directional noise suppressor outperforms both the conventional nondirectional noise suppressor and the conventional directional noise suppressor based on phase based T/F filtering with a negligible degradation in the word error rate for clean speech.

  • Performance Analysis of Lunar Spacecraft Navigation Based on Inter-Satellite Link Annular Beam Antenna

    Lei CHEN  Ke ZHANG  Yangbo HUANG  Zhe LIU  Gang OU  

     
    PAPER-Navigation, Guidance and Control Systems

      Pubricized:
    2016/01/29
      Vol:
    E99-B No:4
      Page(s):
    951-959

    The rapid development of a global navigation satellite system (GNSS) has raised the demand for spacecraft navigation, particularly for lunar spacecraft (LS). First, instead of the traditional approach of combining the united X-band system (UXB) with very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) by a terrestrial-based observing station in Chinese deep-space exploration, the spacecraft navigation based on inter-satellite link (ISL) is proposed because the spatial coverage of the GNSS downstream signals is too narrow to be used for LS navigation. Second, the feasibility of LS navigation by using ISL wide beam signals has been analyzed with the following receiving parameters: the geometrical dilution of precision (GDOP) and the carrier-to-noise ratio (C/N0) for satellites autonomously navigation of ISL and LS respectively; the weighting distance root-mean-square (wdrms) for the combination of both navigation modes. Third, to be different from all existing spacecraft ISL and GNSS navigation methods, an ISL annular beam transmitting antenna has been simulated to minimize the wdrms (1.138m) to obtain the optimal beam coverage: 16°-47° on elevation angle. Theoretical calculations and simulations have demonstrated that both ISL autonomous navigation and LS navigation can be satisfied at the same time. Furthermore, an onboard annular wide beam ISL antenna with optimized parameters has been designed to provide a larger channel capacity with a simpler structure than that of the existing GPS ISL spot beam antenna, a better anti-jamming performance than that of the former GPS ISL UHF-band wide band antenna, and a wider effectively operating area than the traditional terrestrial-based measurement. Lastly, the possibility and availability of applying an ISL receiver with an annular wide beam antenna on the Chinese Chang'E-5T (CE-5T) reentry experiment for autonomous navigation are analyzed and verified by simulating and comparing the ISL receiver with the practiced GNSS receiver.

  • Beamwidth Scaling in Wireless Networks with Outage Constraints

    Trung-Anh DO  Won-Yong SHIN  

     
    PAPER-Fundamental Theories for Communications

      Vol:
    E98-B No:11
      Page(s):
    2202-2211

    This paper analyzes the impact of directional antennas in improving the transmission capacity, defined as the maximum allowable spatial node density of successful transmissions multiplied by their data rate with a given outage constraint, in wireless networks. We consider the case where the gain Gm for the mainlobe of beamwidth can scale at an arbitrarily large rate. Under the beamwidth scaling model, the transmission capacity is analyzed for all path-loss attenuation regimes for the following two network configurations. In dense networks, in which the spatial node density increases with the antenna gain Gm, the transmission capacity scales as Gm4/α, where α denotes the path-loss exponent. On the other hand, in extended networks of fixed node density, the transmission capacity scales logarithmically in Gm. For comparison, we also show an ideal antenna model where there is no sidelobe beam. In addition, computer simulations are performed, which show trends consistent with our analytical behaviors. Our analysis sheds light on a new understanding of the fundamental limit of outage-constrained ad hoc networks operating in the directional mode.

  • A Robust Broad-Band Beamformer with Spatial and Frequency Derivative Constraints

    Yi CHU  

     
    PAPER-Antennas and Propagation

      Vol:
    E92-B No:2
      Page(s):
    567-577

    In this paper, we propose a set of constraints for adaptive broad-band beamforming in the presence of angular errors. We first present spatial and frequency derivative constraints (SFDC) for the design of the quiescent beamformer response. With the wavelet-based blocking matrices, the proposed generalized sidelobe canceller (GSC) preserves the desired signal, and it is less sensitive to the broad-band noise. To make this beamformer more robust to the directional mismatch, we add a pseudo-interference algorithm in the weight adaptive process. Analysis and simulation results demonstrate that the angular beamwidth is insensitive to the input signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).