tailieunhanh - Báo cáo hóa học: " Robert W. Stewart Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineerin"

Tuyển tập báo cáo các nghiên cứu khoa học quốc tế ngành hóa học dành cho các bạn yêu hóa học tham khảo đề tài: Robert W. Stewart Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineerin | EURASIP Journal on Applied Signal Processing 2005 16 2595-2597 2005 Hindawi Publishing Corporation Editorial Robert W. Stewart Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering University of Strathclyde Glasgow G1 1XW Scotland UK Email Michael W. Hoffman Department of Electrical Engineering University of Nebraska-Lincoln Lincoln NE 68588-0511 USA Email mhoffman1@ Stephan Weiss School of Electronics and Computer Science University of Southampton Southampton SO171BJ UK Email In the past years digital signal processing DSP algorithms and architectures for baseband communication systems have fuelled the delivery of applications such as 3G mobile communications and wireless LAN to mass markets. This was made possible by a tremendous growth in the performance of computational devices such as digital signal processors and FPGAs as well as an increase in sampling rates of conversion devices to potentially several 100 MHz. While the development of both computational devices and ADCs DACs continues thus permitting DSP to be applied at IF sampling rates and possibly beyond the opportunities for further enhancing radio devices by DSP algorithms and architectures arise. Against this background of development an IEE EUR-ASIP conference on DSP-Enabled Radio was held at the Institute for System Level Integration ISLI in Livingston Scotland in September 2003. This very lively one-and-a-half-day event brought together 120 researchers from both industry and academia with a strong international participation. It was the spirit of this DSP-Enabled Radio conference and the contributions therein that brought to life the idea to this special issue. This issue contains both contributions from the event and responses to an open call for papers. Naturally the topic of signal processing for radio and communications admits a wide range of research. The papers of which this special issue comprises firstly address general design .

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