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Nakagami vs Rayleigh vs Rician Fading Models

Comparison of Nakagami-m, Rayleigh, and Rician Fading Models Wireless fading models describe how the received signal strength fluctuates due to multipath propagation. This article provides an intuitive, mathematical, and practical comparison of the three most widely used fading models. 1. Why Fading Models Are Needed In wireless communication, signals reach the receiver through multiple paths caused by reflection, diffraction, and scattering. These paths interfere constructively and destructively, producing random fluctuations in signal amplitude and SNR. Fading models statistically characterize these fluctuations. 2. Rayleigh Fading Applicable scenario: Non-line-of-sight (NLOS) environments with many scatterers. Probability density function (PDF): \[ f_R(r) = \frac{r}{\sigma^2} e^{-\frac{r^2}{2\sigma^2}}, \quad r \ge 0 \] Severe fading No dominant LOS...

Quantum Light Communication

Quantum Communication Underwater using hBN Single Photon Emitters Challenges in Underwater Communication Acoustic waves: work over long distances but low data rates, insecure, omni-directional Electromagnetic waves (Radio, Infrared) cannot propagate underwater Optical wavelengths mostly absorbed → communication limited to few meters Current Optical Communication Issues Blue/green light (~417 nm) reduces absorption Attenuated lasers used for underwater communication Probabilistic photon generation → not ideal for high-security applications Need for reliable, on-demand quantum light sources Hexagonal Boron Nitride (hBN) Single Photon Emitters B-centres in hBN emit at 436 nm Engineered using electron beam Photostable and reliable Emission near water absorption minimum Suitable for underwater quantum communication T...

Diversity Order Explained

Understanding Diversity Order (DO) At high SNR, the Bit Error Rate (BER) behaves like: BER ≈ k / (SNR^DO) Where: k is a constant depending on modulation and channel. DO is the diversity order, indicating how steeply BER decreases with SNR. Mathematical Concept of DO Formally, diversity order is defined as: DO = - lim_{SNR → ∞} (log(BER) / log(SNR)) This means: if you plot log(BER) vs log(SNR), the slope at high SNR is the diversity order. Slopes can be fractional depending on the fading channel statistics. Case 1: DO = 1 BER ∝ 1 / SNR^1 = 1 / SNR BER decreases linearly on a log-log scale with SNR. Doubling SNR roughly halves BER. Steep slope → faster improvement → more robust system. Case 2: DO = 0.5 BER ∝ 1 / SNR^0.5 = 1 / √SNR BER decreases more slowly than DO = 1. Doubling SNR decreases BER by ~1/√2 ≈ 0.707. Flatter slope → slower improvement → less robust system. Intuition with Numbers Suppose BER = 0.01 at some SNR,...

BER and Outage Probability

BER and Outage Probability in Atmospheric Turbulence After modeling turbulence using log-normal, Gamma–Gamma, and exponential distributions, the next step is to understand how turbulence affects bit error rate (BER) and outage probability . 1. What BER and Outage Mean in Turbulent Channels Bit Error Rate (BER) BER is the probability that a transmitted bit is detected incorrectly. In free-space optical (FSO) links, turbulence causes random fading of the received intensity, which makes the instantaneous SNR random. Therefore, BER must be averaged over the turbulence statistics: Average BER = E_I[ BER(γ(I)) ] Outage Probability Outage probability measures the likelihood that the received signal is too weak to maintain reliable communication. P_out = P( γ < γ_th ) Since SNR is proportional to received intensity: γ = γ̄ · I 2. Relation Between Inten...

Signal Lead and Lag Explanation

What Does "Signal Leads" or "Signal Lags" Mean? It describes the relative time shift between two signals. Think of two identical waveforms placed on a time axis. Figure 1: Illustration of Signal Lag (The second signal is delayed relative to the first signal). Conversely, the first signal leads the second signal. Signal A Leads Signal B Signal A happens earlier in time. It is shifted to the left. Time → A: **** B: **** A leads B B lags A Signal A Lags Signal B ...

Raised Cosine Filter Online Simulator

Matched Filter Simulator for BPSK Random Bits    ↓ BPSK Mapping (±1)    ↓ Upsampling    ↓ RRC (Root Raised Cosine) Filter Pulse Shaping Number of Symbols: Samples per Symbol (Oversampling): Noise Std Dev: RRC Roll-off Factor (β): Simulate Simulation Note: The simulator generates random BPSK symbols, applies pulse shaping using a Root Raised Cosine (RRC) filter with roll-off factor β , adds AWGN noise, and detects symbols using a matched filter. Lower β values use less bandwidth but pulses are narrower in time and more susceptible to inter-symbol interference (ISI). Higher β values spread the pulse in time but reduce ISI and require more bandwidth.

Pilot Correlation Online Simulator

+------------------------+ |   Start Simulation     | +------------------------+             |             v +------------------------+ |  Read User Inputs:     | |  - Signal Length       | |  - Noise Std Dev       | |  - Lag (Samples)       | +------------------------+             |             v +------------------------+ | Generate Pilot Sequence | | +------------------------+             |             v +------------------------+ | Apply Random Channel   | |  (Complex Gain h)      | +------------------------+             |             v +------------------------+ | Add AWGN Noise    ...

5G NR DMRS-Based OFDM Simulator

  User Input +---------------------------+ | # Subcarriers (Nsc)       | | # OFDM Symbols (Nsym)     | | DMRS length (Ldmrs)       | | # Channel taps            | | Noise std deviation       | +---------------------------+               |               v Generate DMRS Pilot Sequence +---------------------------+ | QPSK symbols of length Ldmrs | e.g., [1+j, -1+j, ...] +---------------------------+               |               v Frequency-Domain Mapping +---------------------------+ | Zero-pad DMRS to all Nsc   <-- Pilot insertion | DMRS on first Ldmrs, rest 0 | X[k] = [DMRS, 0, 0, ..., 0] +---------------------------+               |               v OFDM Modu...

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