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Múltiple Entrada Múltiple Salida (MIMO)×Codi espaciotemporal de blocs d'Alamouti×Codificació Turbo amb Descòdificació Iterativa×
CampTelecomunicacionsTelecomunicacionsTelecomunicacions
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Any d'origen199519981993
Autor originalTelatar, Foschini, and GansSiavash AlamoutiClaude Berrou, Alain Glavieux, and Punya Thitimajshima
Tipusspatial multiplexing techniquespace-time coding schemeiterative error-correcting code
Font seminalTelatar, I. (1999). Capacity of multi-antenna Gaussian channels. European Transactions on Telecommunications, 10(6), 585-595. DOI ↗Alamouti, S. M. (1998). A simple transmit diversity technique for wireless communications. IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 16(8), 1451-1458. DOI ↗Berrou, C., Glavieux, A., & Thitimajshima, P. (1993). Near Shannon limit error-correcting coding and decoding: Turbo-codes. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC), 1064-1070. DOI ↗
Àliesspatial multiplexing, antenna diversityspace-time coding, transmit diversityiterative decoding, concatenated codes
Relacionats555
ResumMIMO is a technique that uses multiple transmit and receive antennas to significantly increase channel capacity and reliability. Pioneered theoretically by Telatar (1999) and Foschini & Gans (1998), MIMO exploits multipath propagation—typically a liability in wireless—as an asset by creating independent spatial channels. It is now fundamental to all modern wireless systems including LTE, WiFi-6, and 5G, where it provides both capacity gains through spatial multiplexing and robustness through diversity.The Alamouti code is an elegant space-time coding scheme that provides full transmit diversity using two antennas and a simple linear receiver. Introduced by Siavash Alamouti in 1998, it requires no channel state information at the transmitter, achieves the same bit-error rate as a single-antenna system with receiver diversity, and uses linear processing for decoding. The Alamouti code has become the de facto standard for transmit diversity in cellular systems and is adopted in LTE, WiFi, and many 5G protocols.Turbo codes, introduced by Berrou, Glavieux, and Thitimajshima in 1993, are a landmark in channel coding history. They achieve performance within 0.5 dB of the Shannon limit—the theoretical boundary for reliable communication—a feat previously thought impossible with practical complexity. Turbo codes use concatenated convolutional codes with an interleaver and iterative decoding via belief propagation. They were adopted in 3G (UMTS) and remain important in 4G/5G systems alongside LDPC codes.
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ScholarGateCompara mètodes: MIMO · Alamouti Code · Turbo Code. Recuperat el 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/ca/compare