Abstract: Many cluster based routing protocols have been
proposed in the field of wireless sensor networks, in which a group of
nodes are formed as clusters. A cluster head is selected from one
among those nodes based on residual energy, coverage area, number
of hops and that cluster-head will perform data gathering from
various sensor nodes and forwards aggregated data to the base station
or to a relay node (another cluster-head), which will forward the
packet along with its own data packet to the base station. Here a
Game Theory based Diligent Energy Utilization Algorithm (GTDEA)
for routing is proposed. In GTDEA, the cluster head selection is done
with the help of game theory, a decision making process, that selects
a cluster-head based on three parameters such as residual energy
(RE), Received Signal Strength Index (RSSI) and Packet Reception
Rate (PRR). Finding a feasible path to the destination with minimum
utilization of available energy improves the network lifetime and is
achieved by the proposed approach. In GTDEA, the packets are
forwarded to the base station using inter-cluster routing technique,
which will further forward it to the base station. Simulation results
reveal that GTDEA improves the network performance in terms of
throughput, lifetime, and power consumption.
Abstract: In the paper, a fast high-resolution range profile synthetic algorithm called orthogonal matching pursuit with sensing dictionary (OMP-SD) is proposed. It formulates the traditional HRRP synthetic to be a sparse approximation problem over redundant dictionary. As it employs a priori that the synthetic range profile (SRP) of targets are sparse, SRP can be accomplished even in presence of data lost. Besides, the computation complexity decreases from O(MNDK) flops for OMP to O(M(N + D)K) flops for OMP-SD by introducing sensing dictionary (SD). Simulation experiments illustrate its advantages both in additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) and noiseless situation, respectively.
Abstract: In this paper comparison of Reflector Antenna
analyzing techniques based on wave and ray nature of optics is
presented for an offset reflector antenna using GRASP (General
Reflector antenna Analysis Software Package) software. The results
obtained using PO (Physical Optics), PTD (Physical theory of
Diffraction), and GTD (Geometrical Theory of Diffraction) are
compared. The validity of PO and GTD techniques in regions around
the antenna, caustic behavior of GTD in main beam, and deviation of
GTD in case of near-in sidelobes of radiation pattern are discussed.
The comparison for far-out sidelobes predicted by PO, PO + PTD
and GTD is described. The effect of Direct Radiations from feed
which results in feed selection for the system is addressed.
Abstract: We study the performance of compressed beamforming
weights feedback technique in generalized triangular decomposition
(GTD) based MIMO system. GTD is a beamforming technique that
enjoys QoS flexibility. The technique, however, will perform at its
optimum only when the full knowledge of channel state information
(CSI) is available at the transmitter. This would be impossible in
the real system, where there are channel estimation error and limited
feedback. We suggest a way to implement the quantized beamforming
weights feedback, which can significantly reduce the feedback data,
on GTD-based MIMO system and investigate the performance of
the system. Interestingly, we found that compressed beamforming
weights feedback does not degrade the BER performance of the
system at low input power, while the channel estimation error
and quantization do. For comparison, GTD is more sensitive to
compression and quantization, while SVD is more sensitive to the
channel estimation error. We also explore the performance of GTDbased
MU-MIMO system, and find that the BER performance starts
to degrade largely at around -20 dB channel estimation error.
Abstract: This presentation reviews recent advances in superalloys and thermal barrier coating (TBC) for application in hot sections of energy-efficient gas-turbine engines. It has been reviewed that in the modern combined-cycle gas turbines (CCGT) applying single-crystal energy materials (SC superalloys) and thermal barrier coatings (TBC), and – in one design – closed-loop steam cooling, thermal efficiency can reach more than 60%. These technological advancements contribute to profitable and clean power generation with reduced emission. Alternatively, the use of advanced superalloys (e.g. GTD-111 superalloy, Allvac 718Plus superalloy) and advanced thermal barrier coatings (TBC) in modern gas-turbines has been shown to yield higher energy-efficiency in power generation.