With 26 entirely new and 5 extensively revised chapters out of the total of 39, the Mobile Communications Handbook, Third Edition presents an in-depth and up-to-date overview of the full range of wireless and mobile technologies that we rely on every day. This includes, but is not limited to, everything from digital cellular mobile radio and evolving personal communication systems to wireless data and wireless networks
Illustrating the extraordinary evolution of wireless communications and networks in the last 15 years, this book is divided into five sections:
Basic Principles provides the essential underpinnings for the wide-ranging mobile communication technologies currently in use throughout the world.
Wireless Standards contains technical details of the standards we use every day, as well as insights into their development.
Source Compression and Quality Assessment covers the compression techniques used to represent voice and video for transmission over mobile communications systems as well as how the delivered voice and video quality are assessed.
Wireless Networks examines the wide range of current and developing wireless networks and wireless methodologies.
Emerging Applications explores newly developed areas of vehicular communications and 60 GHz wireless communications.
Written by experts from industry and academia, this book provides a succinct overview of each topic, quickly bringing the reader up to date, but with sufficient detail and references to enable deeper investigations. Providing much more than a "just the facts" presentation, contributors use their experience in the field to provide insights into how each topic has emerged and to point toward forthcoming developments in mobile communications.
Reviews
"The Mobile Communications Handbook is the most comprehensive overview of the key concepts and techniques underpinning modern wireless communication systems. The chapters are written by leading experts in the corresponding area. There is no ference book like it available."
—Jeffrey G. Andrews, The University of Texas at Austin, USA
Contents
Section I: Basic Principles
The Discrete Fourier Transform, B. Usevitch
Pulse Code Modulation, L.W. Couch II
Baseband Signaling and Pulse Shaping, M.L. Honig and M. Barton
Complex Envelope Representations for Modulated Signals, L.W. Couch II
Modulation Methods, G.L. Stüber
Error Control Coding, T.E. Fuja
Information Theory, E. Abbe, B. Rimoldi, and R. Urbanke
Rayleigh Fading Channels, B. Sklar
Channel Equalization, J.G. Proakis
Echo Cancellation, G. Cherubini
Synchronization of Communication Receivers, C.N. Georghiades and Erchin Serpedin
Pseudonoise Sequences, T. Helleseth and P. Vijay Kumar
Introduction to Spread Spectrum Systems, D. Rajan
Signal Space, R.E. Ziemer
Optimum Receivers, G.C. Orsak
MIMO Systems for Diversity and Interference Mitigation, M. Chiani