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Slotted ALOHA tilfeldig aksessprotokoll×Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA)×Shannon kanal-kapasitetsteorem×
FagfeltTelekommunikasjonTelekommunikasjonTelekommunikasjon
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Opprinnelsesår197019901948
OpphavspersonNorman Abramson and Lawrence RobertsPhil KarnClaude Shannon
Typerandom access protocolrandom access protocolfundamental theoretical bound
Opprinnelig kildeRoberts, L. G. (1975). ALOHA packet system with and without slots and capture. ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, 5(2), 28-42. DOI ↗Karn, P. (1990). MACA—a new channel access method for packet radio. In Proceedings of the ARRL/CRRL Amateur Radio 9th Computer Networking Conference, 134-140. link ↗Shannon, C. E. (1948). A mathematical theory of communication. Bell System Technical Journal, 27(3), 379-423. DOI ↗
Aliasrandom access, medium accessmedium access control, WiFi MACchannel capacity, information theory bound
Relaterte335
SammendragSlotted ALOHA is a fundamental random access protocol enabling multiple devices to share a wireless channel without centralized coordination. Introduced by Abramson (1970) and refined by Roberts (1975), it divides time into fixed slots and allows devices to transmit at the beginning of a slot with a fixed probability. While simple and elegant, Slotted ALOHA achieves only 37% channel utilization under saturation (optimal traffic load), a fundamental limit discovered by Abramson. Despite this limitation, Slotted ALOHA remains a teaching tool and appears in modern systems like satellite and IoT networks.CSMA/CA is a random access protocol for wireless medium access control, designed to enable multiple devices to share a wireless channel while minimizing collisions. Introduced by Phil Karn in 1990, it is the foundation of WiFi (IEEE 802.11) and is now the de facto standard for unlicensed spectrum access. CSMA/CA combines carrier sensing (listen before transmit) with collision avoidance (RTS/CTS handshake) to improve channel efficiency and fairness, avoiding the efficiency loss of pure random access (Aloha).Shannon's channel capacity theorem, published in 1948, establishes the maximum rate at which information can be reliably transmitted over a noisy channel. Expressed as C = B log2(1 + S/N) for additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN), it is a fundamental bound in information theory and communications engineering. Shannon proved that reliable communication is possible at any rate below capacity, and impossible above it. This theorem underpins the design of all modern communication systems and motivates coding theory, modulation, and signal processing techniques.
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ScholarGateSammenlign metoder: Slotted ALOHA · CSMA/CA · Shannon Capacity. Hentet 2026-06-19 fra https://scholargate.app/no/compare