By (author): Tetsuya Kawanishi

Copyright: 2020
Pages: 330
ISBN: 9781630817404

Our Price: $124.00
Qty:
Our Price: $102.00
Qty:

Description

This innovative resource presents comprehensive and detailed information on wired and wireless seamless access systems consisting of various types of transmission media including microwave, millimeter-wave, THz wave, and lightwave in fibers. This book explains heterogenous networks consisting of various transmission media with many media converters. Applications of seamless access networks for public infrastructure such as airports, railways and information and communications systems are described. The book focuses on two important features of seamless access systems, including high-capacity transmission capacity limitation due to economics as well as physics, and low-latency transmission. Latency has significant impact on applications including financial transactions and online gaming. Low-latency data is very important for self-driving cars as well. This book presents the concept of sensor-over-fiber, where many antenna units are connected through optical fibers to gather sensor responses coherently.

 

This book provides possible scenarios of future mobile networks which have many antenna units and opto-electric device technologies. Readers will learn about basic and state-of-the-art signal estimation techniques and concludes with exploration of social issues on future information and communication (ICT) infrastructure.

Table Of Contents
Introduction; Role of radio and optical technologies in public infrastructure; Basics on transmission media; Concept of seamless access systems; High-capacity transmission system; Low latency data transfer; Concept of sensor-over-fiber; Application to transport infrastructure; Application to mobile networks; Requirement for opto-electric devices; Measurement technologies for seamless access systems.

Author

  • Tetsuya Kawanishi

    is a research executive director at the National Institute Information and Communications Technology and a professor at Waseda University. He received his Ph.D. in electronics and communication from Kyoto University. He is a fellow of IEEE.