How space-time codes work (5G networks)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
  • Information Theory Society presents a brief history of wireless communication (radio) leading to the idea of multiple-antenna wireless systems (MIMO) and space-time codes. 5G networks
    Written by:
    Brit Cruise
    Matthieu Bloch
    Michelle Effros (corrected from video)
    Suhas Diggavi (corrected from video)

Комментарии • 69

  • @nyscersul42
    @nyscersul42 2 года назад +4

    I love how you showed the alternating current on the battery... perfect illustration hehe

  • @3nthamornin
    @3nthamornin Месяц назад

    i just found your channel by accident and ive got to say your content is FANTASTIC! you explain the concepts so well. thanks!

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  Месяц назад +1

      Cool glad you found it via this video, stay tuned!

  • @samirkaushik8863
    @samirkaushik8863 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for the amazingly simple explanation!

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  6 месяцев назад +1

      cool nobody has found this video a in a while

  • @jameswise9171
    @jameswise9171 6 лет назад +48

    This is the best RUclips channel.

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  5 лет назад +2

      Thank you for your kind words - stay tuned for more

  • @JavierSalcedoC
    @JavierSalcedoC 6 лет назад +20

    Art of the Explanation

  • @zeikjt
    @zeikjt 6 лет назад +5

    That was great. I love how simple the solution was, that's an inspiring engineering result :)

  • @mehaksaini2552
    @mehaksaini2552 Год назад

    Such awesome content!!! Wow!!

  • @yomanos
    @yomanos 6 лет назад +3

    Keep up the good work, this channel makes great content.

  • @desert-rat145
    @desert-rat145 6 лет назад +4

    Very good explanation! I'm working on my CCNA wireless cert and I hope to see more wireless related videos

  • @ZonkoKongo
    @ZonkoKongo 6 лет назад +9

    I love all 11:31 minutes of this video.

  • @endxofxeternity
    @endxofxeternity Месяц назад +2

    I love this!

  • @betoib1504
    @betoib1504 6 лет назад +3

    That was awesome, thank you!

  • @Superogobongo
    @Superogobongo 5 лет назад

    Truly excellent presentation, thank you

  • @SerioSeria
    @SerioSeria 4 года назад +3

    This is just gold! You are producing extremely high quality material for free to educate people on Information Theory.
    You really have the gift to turn complex concepts into digestable and meaningful information that most people in this field can get. That is just brilliant!
    I am teaching this myself and find it hard to explain in a simple, easy to follow manner. Your videos help me a lot with improving the teachability of this concepts.
    Thanks a million for all of your content! Keep up the awesome work!

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  4 года назад

      thank you so much for the words of inspiration

  • @ImmacHn
    @ImmacHn 6 лет назад +2

    I love this channel.

  • @pscheidt
    @pscheidt 6 лет назад +4

    Really good! Sharing like crazy.

  • @literallydoing4425
    @literallydoing4425 4 дня назад +1

    What if we were to use super low frequency radio waves with many different amplitudes? Could that possibly be a solution to the wireless data problem?
    (Ok, strike that I guess)

  • @xramoj
    @xramoj 5 лет назад +7

    1st MIMO video that gives a little bit of explanation.

  • @prasidhr5130
    @prasidhr5130 2 года назад

    At 11:15, the background looks like the walk area at NUI, Maynooth in the southern campus. The multiple transceivers setup at 11:03 looks like one in TCD. Are you Irish?

  • @zga8
    @zga8 5 лет назад

    Very good explanation

  • @cryptomania3553
    @cryptomania3553 2 года назад

    Gold

  • @johnaweiss
    @johnaweiss 6 месяцев назад

    Is "A" a carrier frequency? A simple fixed-frequency, fixed-amplitude modulation of the carrier? Multi-quadrant data?

  • @grjesus9979
    @grjesus9979 2 года назад +2

    The whole thing about MIMO is to increase capacity. Due to multipath there is going to be inevitable different delays associated with different paths. Therefore when a transmitter sends a symbol in different antennas, in the receiver it just dont arrive at the same time. So my question is what is the whole point of MIMO if we dont take into account the delays and therefore the whole impulse response associated with each path. In other words why you only consider fadind as a scalar factor? Shouldnt it contains also a delay factor?

    • @grosugeorge2107
      @grosugeorge2107 2 года назад +1

      I find this a good point and the question is nice. I think the phase shift is assumed somewhat sufficient to incorporate delay as an out-of-synchrony measure, although in my humble opinion its far from being the same as phase shifts are shift-direction invariant (they alone dont tell you necessarily if one signal is behind or more advanced than the others signals). Definitely there is more to cover on this topic.

    • @shaaradayamini
      @shaaradayamini 6 месяцев назад

      The delay spread is taken into account in OFDM-MIMO systems, the symbol time in OFDM systems is sufficiently higher than the delay spread at the receiver antennas. It means that the duration for which a 1 or 0 is being transmitted is large enough, that the smaller delay spread does not let them interfere and the Receiver can separate them out.

  • @CrucialMuzic
    @CrucialMuzic 6 лет назад +3

    Another video from Art of the Problem!!?
    Someone pinch me, I must be dreaming ;p
    Again very informative and straight to the point, I love it :)

  • @inarisound
    @inarisound 5 лет назад +1

    Astonishing.

  • @NeelBasu
    @NeelBasu 4 года назад

    In the cellphone example there are multiple transmitting antennas and a single receiving antenna. So it is multi input. But I don't understand why that is multiple output ? Because the cellphones do not have multiple antennas. Why it isn't Multi Input Single Output ? Or do the cellphones have multiple antennas too ?

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  4 года назад

      That's correct the cell phones also have multi antennas.

    • @NeelBasu
      @NeelBasu 4 года назад +1

      @@ArtOfTheProblem yes, but one antenna for gsm another antenna for cellular another antenna for bluetooth another antenna for gps ? What if a device only have a cellular communication abilities no wifi, gps, bluetooth. Or if a device have wifi only, no cellular, gps, or bluetooth. Does the device still have multiple antenna ?

  • @muhammadadil3981
    @muhammadadil3981 3 года назад

    Sir, can we ask for videos to be prepaired on request? On suggested topics?

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  3 года назад +1

      No I don't take solicitation but I always open to suggestions. unless you'd like to commission a video?

    • @muhammadadil3981
      @muhammadadil3981 3 года назад

      @@ArtOfTheProblem Videos related to Information Theory? Like for example on "Shannon Channel Capacity Theorems" etc.

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  3 года назад +2

      @@muhammadadil3981 i have a whole series on this! check out my channel page (episode 2)

    • @muhammadadil3981
      @muhammadadil3981 3 года назад

      @@ArtOfTheProblem sure sir

  • @adityasahu96
    @adityasahu96 4 года назад +1

    omg what an explanation!!

  • @__-xl1zi
    @__-xl1zi 6 лет назад +1

    *PLS KEEP MAKING VIDS!*

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  6 лет назад

      new videos on the way

    • @__-xl1zi
      @__-xl1zi 6 лет назад

      Thx man! I was so scared cause this was posted months ago and I thought for a second u stopped! R u ever making one for how cryptocurrency works? I saw you made a teaser for it before. I rlly was looking forward to it.

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  6 лет назад

      yes I have a 30min special video on Bitcoin coming out in < 1 month, been working on it for a long time.

  • @mycontent3632
    @mycontent3632 6 лет назад +2

    9:00 How does the receiver know what H_1 and H_2 are? Doesn't it need that to find A and B?

    • @prateeksingh5293
      @prateeksingh5293 3 года назад +1

      I don't think that the receiver needs to know H_1 and H_2 because the decoding algorithm for the message remains the same
      The two message symbols being sent remains in the form of (A)(B) and (-B)(A). Now, regardless of the receiver knowing whether the symbols are being sent from H_1 or H_2, the received equations will remain A-B and A+B

  • @gabepk
    @gabepk 4 года назад

    Wow! I graduated from Computer Science 2 years ago and I had no idea about this. I have one question, though: Do you know if phones that accepts 2 SIM cards have 2 signal receptors? Because sometimes one SIM can be out of service, but not the other one. :)

  • @daslolo
    @daslolo 4 года назад

    wow! so clear

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  4 года назад

      glad to hear it thanks for the feedback we have 3 more of these on the way

    • @daslolo
      @daslolo 4 года назад +1

      Very nice I'll watch them!
      Could you have a look at the DJI Digital FPV and tell me what you think of the antenna configuration? We usually fly analog and so we don't really deal with this distribution of signal, deciding on antennas is trivial but with a MIMO... no idea what's the best configuration for long range, probably not something as trivial.
      Also did you read that paper by a Chinese team where they use circularly polarized antennas to increase diversity?

  • @Primence
    @Primence 6 лет назад +5

    niced

  • @abdurrahmansa3763
    @abdurrahmansa3763 5 лет назад

    Awesome

  • @KittyBoom360
    @KittyBoom360 6 лет назад +8

    If you could explain entropic uncertainty in reference to information theory and quantum mechanics in a comprehensive way to your viewers... Wait, what I am asking, the impossible??? Are you up for it?
    (but don't let anything delay your upcoming stuff on Bitcoin and blockchain!)

    • @ArtOfTheProblem
      @ArtOfTheProblem  6 лет назад +9

      :) We do plan to cover Quantum Information Theory in 2018

  • @kumu141
    @kumu141 3 года назад

    11:23 it is supposed to be Suhas Diggavi (UCLA)

  • @diego898
    @diego898 6 лет назад +3

    The music was very high-tension - something out of There Will Be Blood

  • @anujmandrekar171
    @anujmandrekar171 2 года назад

    the background music is very irritating

  • @__mk_km__
    @__mk_km__ 6 лет назад +2

    Naaah
    Just gonna use PRN codes ;)

  • @chuckjordan6455
    @chuckjordan6455 5 лет назад

    1:18 "BY THE 1980s"? Why by the 1980s??? That doesn't make sense.

  • @SuperSeagull12
    @SuperSeagull12 5 лет назад

    1:41 That's... not how a signal generator works.

    • @Killadog1980
      @Killadog1980 5 лет назад

      It is so obvious that you should have asked yourself, why would he represent the signal generator like that?

    • @SuperSeagull12
      @SuperSeagull12 5 лет назад

      @@Killadog1980 I think you missed my point. Showing a signal generator as a box with wires mechanically dancing around inside is quite silly.