After successful completion of the course, students are able to develop, implement, and they are able to assess MIMO transmission techniques.
They are able to select suitable MIMO channel models to achieve this goal.
The use of multiple almost co-located antennas (also referred to as multiple-input multiple-output, or MIMO) in wireless communication channels for enhancing system capacity and link reliability has become a major research topic within the last decade. Some of the relevant information-theoretic results have been known for a long time. Now, advances in miniaturization enable the implementation of the required signal processing tasks in commercial applications. Recent initiatives for standardization of future MIMO communication systems include UMTS (3GPP Release 7 and UMTS-LTE) and Wireless LANs (IEEE 802.11n). These efforts reflect the importance of MIMO techniques to modern communication systems. In this course, we give an introduction to the fundamentals of MIMO communications over wireless channels. The topics include information-theoretic, signal processing aspects, and considerations about modeling the electromagnetic propagation channel. Finally, we exemplify the theory by discussing the designs of several MIMO communication systems.
Contents
Lectures
First class: Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2019, 1:00-2:30 pm, SEM 389, room no. CG 01 18
oral exam
Not necessary
Foundations of linear algebra, foundations of signal- and systems theory