• Title/Summary/Keyword: compressive sensing

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Improvement in the Channel Capacity in Visible Light Emitting Diodes using Compressive Sensing (압축센싱기법을 이용한 가시광 무선링크 전송용량 증가기술 연구)

  • Jung, Eui-Suk;Lee, Yong-Tae;Han, Sang-Kook
    • Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society
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    • v.15 no.10
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    • pp.6296-6302
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    • 2014
  • A new technique, which can increase the channel bandwidth in an optical wireless orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) link based on a light emitting diode (LED), is proposed. The technique uses adaptive sampling to convert an OFDM signal to a sparse waveform. In compressive sensing (CS), a sparse signal that is sampled below the Nyquist/Shannon limit can be reconstructed successively with sufficient measurements. The data rate of the proposed CS-based visible light communication (VLC)-OFDM link increases from 30.72 Mb/s to 51.2 Mb/s showing an error vector magnitude (EVM) of 31 % at the quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) symbol.

Block-Based Transform-Domain Measurement Coding for Compressive Sensing of Images (영상 압축센싱을 위한 블록기반 변환영역 측정 부호화)

  • Nguyen, Quang Hong;Nguyen, Viet Anh;Trinh, Chien Van;Dinh, Khanh Quoc;Park, Younghyeon;Jeon, Byeungwoo
    • The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences
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    • v.39A no.12
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    • pp.746-755
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    • 2014
  • Compressive sensing (CS) has drawn much interest as a new sampling technique that enables signals to be sampled at a much lower than the Nyquist rate. By noting that the block-based compressive sensing can still keep spatial correlation in measurement domain, in this paper, we propose a novel encoding technique for measurement data obtained in the block-based CS of natural image. We apply discrete wavelet transform (DWT) to decorrelate CS measurements and then assign a proper quantization scheme to those DWT coefficients. Thus, redundancy of CS measurements and bitrate of system are reduced remarkably. Experimental results show improvements in rate-distortion performance by the proposed method against two existing methods of scalar quantization (SQ) and differential pulse-code modulation (DPCM). In the best case, the proposed method gains up to 4 dB, 0.9 dB, and 2.5 dB compared with the Block-based CS-Smoothed Projected Landweber plus SQ, Block-based CS-Smoothed Projected Landweber plus DPCM, and Multihypothesis Block-based CS-Smoothed Projected Landweber plus DPCM, respectively.

Non-homogeneous noise removal for side scan sonar images using a structural sparsity based compressive sensing algorithm (구조적 희소성 기반 압축 센싱 알고리즘을 통한 측면주사소나 영상의 비균일 잡음 제거)

  • Chen, Youngseng;Ku, Bonwha;Lee, Seungho;Kim, Seongil;Ko, Hanseok
    • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Korea
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    • v.37 no.1
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    • pp.73-81
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    • 2018
  • The quality of side scan sonar images is determined by the frequency of a sonar. A side scan sonar with a low frequency creates low-quality images. One of the factors that lead to low quality is a high-level noise. The noise is occurred by the underwater environment such as equipment noise, signal interference and so on. In addition, in order to compensate for the transmission loss of sonar signals, the received signal is recovered by TVG (Time-Varied Gain), and consequently the side scan sonar images contain non-homogeneous noise which is opposite to optic images whose noise is assumed as homogeneous noise. In this paper, the SSCS (Structural Sparsity based Compressive Sensing) is proposed for removing non-homogeneous noise. The algorithm incorporates both local and non-local models in a structural feature domain so that it guarantees the sparsity and enhances the property of non-local self-similarity. Moreover, the non-local model is corrected in consideration of non-homogeneity of noises. Various experimental results show that the proposed algorithm is superior to existing method.

Battery-free slotted patch antenna sensor for wireless strain and crack monitoring

  • Yi, Xiaohua;Cho, Chunhee;Wang, Yang;Tentzeris, Manos M.
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.18 no.6
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    • pp.1217-1231
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    • 2016
  • In this research, a slotted patch antenna sensor is designed for wireless strain and crack sensing. An off-the-shelf RFID (radiofrequency identification) chip is adopted in the antenna sensor design for signal modulation. The operation power of the RFID chip is captured from wireless reader interrogation signal, so the sensor operation is completely battery-free (passive) and wireless. For strain and crack sensing of a structure, the antenna sensor is bonded on the structure surface like a regular strain gage. Since the antenna resonance frequency is directly related with antenna dimension, which deforms when strain occurs on the structural surface, the deformation/strain can be correlated with antenna resonance frequency shift measured by an RFID reader. The slotted patch antenna sensor performance is first evaluated through mechanics-electromagnetics coupled simulation. Extensive experiments are then conducted to validate the antenna sensor performance, including tensile and compressive strain sensing, wireless interrogation range, and fatigue crack sensing.

Cooperative Spectrum Sensing Utilizing Sub-Nyquist Sampling in Cognitive Radio Networks (인지 무선 네트워크에서 Sub-Nyquist 샘플링을 활용한 협력 스펙트럼 센싱 기법)

  • Jung, Honggyu;Kim, Kwangyul;Shin, Yoan
    • The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences
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    • v.40 no.7
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    • pp.1234-1238
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    • 2015
  • We propose cooperative spectrum sensing schemes based on sub-Nyquist sampling. As compressed sensing has recently attracted great attention, sparsity order estimation techniques also has been widely investigated. Thus, assuming that the sparsity order of channel occupancy can be obtained, we mathematically analyze the detection performance of sub-Nyquist sampling schemes according to various sampling rates and cooperative spectrum sensing schemes. Simulation results verify the performance of the proposed schemes.

Mechanical and Electrical Characteristics of Concrete Members Enlarged with Self-Sensing Cementitious Materials for Repair (자기감지형 보수재로 단면증타된 콘크리트 부재의 역학 및 전기적 특성 )

  • Gun-Cheol Lee;Geon-Woo Im;Chang-Min Lee;Sung-Won Hong;Young-Min Kim
    • Journal of the Korea institute for structural maintenance and inspection
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    • v.27 no.5
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    • pp.139-146
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    • 2023
  • In this study, compressive strength and adhesion strength were measured as repair materials to evaluate the mechanical and electrical properties of compression and shear specimens with self-sensing repair materials. As a result of the experiment, the strength improvement rate of the compression test specimen was higher than the section enlargement area ratio, but the shear test specimen did not show an improvement in strength as much as the section enlargement area ratio. Compression experiments under load showed high correlation between FCR-Strain and FCR-Stress, confirming self-sensing performance. However, the shear test did not show as much correlation as the compression test. Accordingly, it is judged that the self-sensing repair material is suitable for the compression member on which the compression load acts in the building.

압축센싱 기반의 무선통신 시스템

  • Reu, Na-Tan;Sin, Yo-An
    • The Magazine of the IEIE
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.56-67
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    • 2011
  • As a result of quickly growing data, a digital transmission system is required to deal with the challenge of acquiring signals at a very high sampling rate, Fortunately, the CS (Compressed Sensing or Compressive Sensing) theory, a new concept based on theoretical results of signal reconstruction, can be employed to exploit the sparsity of the received signals. Then, they can be adequately reconstructed from a set of their random projections, leading to dramatic reduction in the sampling rate and in the use of ADC (Analog-to-Digital Converter) resources. The goal of this article is provide an overview of the basic CS theory and to survey some important compressed sensing applications in wireless communications.

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Modal parameter identification with compressed samples by sparse decomposition using the free vibration function as dictionary

  • Kang, Jie;Duan, Zhongdong
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.123-133
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    • 2020
  • Compressive sensing (CS) is a newly developed data acquisition and processing technique that takes advantage of the sparse structure in signals. Normally signals in their primitive space or format are reconstructed from their compressed measurements for further treatments, such as modal analysis for vibration data. This approach causes problems such as leakage, loss of fidelity, etc., and the computation of reconstruction itself is costly as well. Therefore, it is appealing to directly work on the compressed data without prior reconstruction of the original data. In this paper, a direct approach for modal analysis of damped systems is proposed by decomposing the compressed measurements with an appropriate dictionary. The damped free vibration function is adopted to form atoms in the dictionary for the following sparse decomposition. Compared with the normally used Fourier bases, the damped free vibration function spans a space with both the frequency and damping as the control variables. In order to efficiently search the enormous two-dimension dictionary with frequency and damping as variables, a two-step strategy is implemented combined with the Orthogonal Matching Pursuit (OMP) to determine the optimal atom in the dictionary, which greatly reduces the computation of the sparse decomposition. The performance of the proposed method is demonstrated by a numerical and an experimental example, and advantages of the method are revealed by comparison with another such kind method using POD technique.

Multipath Ghosts in Through-the-Wall Radar Imaging: Challenges and Solutions

  • Abdalla, Abdi T.;Alkhodary, Mohammad T.;Muqaibel, Ali H.
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.40 no.3
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    • pp.376-388
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    • 2018
  • In through-the-wall radar imaging (TWRI), the presence of front and side walls causes multipath propagation, which creates fake targets called multipath ghosts. They populate the scene and reduce the probability of correct target detection, classification, and localization. In modern TWRI, specular multipath exploitation has received considerable attention for reducing the effects of multipath ghosts. However, this exploitation is challenged by the requirements of the reflecting geometry, which is not always available. Currently, the demand for a high radar image resolution dictates the use of a large aperture and wide bandwidth. This results in a large amount of data. To tackle this problem, compressive sensing (CS) is applied to TWRI. With CS, only a fraction of the data are used to produce a high-quality image, provided that the scene is sparse. However, owing to multipath ghosts, the scene sparsity is highly deteriorated; hence, the performance of the CS algorithms is compromised. This paper presents and discusses the adverse effects of multipath ghosts in TWRI. It describes the physical formation of ghosts, their challenges, and existing suppression techniques.

Vibration and Stability Control of Rotating Composite Shafts via Collocated Piezoelectic Sensing and Actuation (압전감지기 및 압전작동기를 이용한 복합재료 회전축의 진동 및 안전성 제어)

  • Jeong, Nam-Heui;Kang, Ho-Shik;Yoon, Il-Sung;Song, Oh-Seop
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.31 no.2 s.257
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    • pp.152-159
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    • 2007
  • A study on the control of free vibration and stability characteristics of rotating hollow circular shafts subjected to compressive axial forces is presented in this paper. Both passive structural tailoring technique and active control scheme via collocated piezoelectric sensing and actuation are used in the study Gyroscopic and centrifugal forces combined with the compressive axial force contribute to the occurrence of divergence and flutter instabilities of the rotating shaft. The dual methodology based on the passive and active control schemes shows a high degree of efficiency toward postponement of these instabilities and expansion of the domain of stability of the system. The structural model of the shaft is based on an advanced thin-walled beam structure that includes the non-classical effects of transverse shear, anisotropy of constituent materials and rotatory inertia.