RUDN University mathematicians developed new approach to 5g base stations operation
2021-02-03
(Press-News.org) Mathematicians from RUDN University suggested and tested a new method to assess the productivity of fifth-generation (5G) base stations. The new technology would help get rid of mobile access stations and even out traffic fluctuations. The results of the study were published in the IEEE Conference Publication.
Stations of the new 5G New Radio (NR) communication standard developed by the 3GPP consortium are expected to shortly be installed in large quantities all over the world. First of all, the stations will be deployed in places with high traffic use and at public event locations (e.g. shopping malls, city squares, or stadiums). In these conditions, the number of active communication sessions continually changes, and such traffic fluctuations can dramatically reduce network capacity. Traditionally, this issue has been solved with mobile stations (drones or cars), but they cannot be used in a closed space such as a shopping mall. Moreover, they are unable to even out traffic fluctuations on the sub-minute scale (i.e. within periods less than 1 minute). A team of mathematicians from RUDN University suggested a 5G network deployment scheme that provides for the mitigation of traffic fluctuations on the sub-minute level and can be rolled out in closed spaces.
"The 5G NR technology promises exceptionally high speed on the final mile--a channel that connects a user's device with a provider's access point. The connection is expected to be extremely fast within the millimeter waves range. The new technology is supposed to satisfy the growing needs of users. Our approach could help deploy 5G in busy public places and effectively even out traffic fluctuations," explained Anastasia Daraseliya, a postgraduate student at the Institute for Applied Mathematics and Telecommunications, RUDN University.
The idea suggested by RUDN mathematicians lies in using two technologies at once: NR and the so-called WiGig--60-gigahertz Wi-Fi with a data transmission rate up to 7 Gb/sec. By aggregating a licensed and a non-licensed band spectrum, one could shed some of the load to the non-licensed band and thus increase the transmission speed. Both technologies operate in the millimeter waves range and therefore are adjusted to each other by default. The team also assumed that both technologies would be widely supported by modern-day and future devices.
The team studied the joint user traffic query serving by base stations using a combination of NR and WiGig and analyzed the future applicability of this system. To do so, they used several methods of stochastic geometry, Markovian chain theory, and queueing theory. The team described the methodology of interaction between the two standards in one base station and concluded that the new approach would support continuous 5G communication in busy public places without losing transmission capacity even in cases of sub-minute traffic drops
"Having determined the density of base station and taking into account the density of user devices, we suggested a performance assessment structure for joint use of NR and WiGig. Although in the model the two systems are located close to each other, they do not exchange data. Therefore, such a structure can be deployed in any necessary configuration depending on conditions and requirements," added Anastasia Daraseliya from RUDN Unviersity.
INFORMATION:
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-02-03
ITHACA, N.Y. -Wind energy scientists at Cornell University have released a new global wind atlas - a digital compendium filled with documented extreme wind speeds for all parts of the world - to help engineers select the turbines in any given region and accelerate the development of sustainable energy.
This wind atlas is the first publicly available, uniform and geospatially explicit (datasets tied to locations) description of extreme wind speeds, according to the research, "A Global Assessment of Extreme Wind Speeds For Wind Energy Applications," published in Nature Energy.
"Cost-efficient expansion of the wind-energy industry is enabled by access ...
2021-02-03
One of the most important ways to stop the spread of COVID-19 is for people who have tested positive, or have symptoms, to isolate themselves from the other people they live with.
But a new University of Michigan poll suggests that nearly one in five older adults don't have the ability to do this - and that those who are Hispanic or Black, or who have lower incomes or poor health to begin with, are more likely to lack a safe isolation place in their home.
The poll also shows significant inequality in another key aspect of staying safe and healthy during the pandemic: the ability to get outside for fresh air and exercise, and to engage safely with friends, ...
2021-02-03
Despite worldwide use of lithium batteries, the exact dynamics of their operation has remained elusive. X-rays have proven to be a powerful tool for peering inside of these batteries to see the changes that occur in real time.
Using the ultrabright X-rays of the Advanced Photon Source (APS), a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility at the DOE's Argonne National Laboratory, a research team recently observed the internal evolution of the materials inside solid-state lithium batteries as they were charged and discharged. This detailed 3D ...
2021-02-03
The speed of light has come to 3D printing. Northwestern University engineers have developed a new method that uses light to improve 3D printing speed and precision while also, in combination with a high-precision robot arm, providing the freedom to move, rotate or dilate each layer as the structure is being built.
Most conventional 3D printing processes rely on replicating a digital design model that is sliced into layers with the layers printed and assembled upwards like a cake. The Northwestern method introduces the ability to manipulate the original design layer by layer and pivot the printing direction without recreating the model. This "on-the-fly" ...
2021-02-03
How do the normal pains of everyday life, such as headaches and backaches, influence our ability to think? Recent studies suggest that healthy individuals in pain also show deficits in working memory, or the cognitive process of holding and manipulating information over short periods of time. Prior research suggests that pain-related impairments in working memory depend on an individual's level of emotional distress. Yet the specific brain and psychological factors underlying the role of emotional distress in contributing to this relationship are not well understood.
A new study, titled "Modeling neural and self-reported factors of affective distress in the relationship between pain and working memory in healthy individuals," and published in the journal ...
2021-02-03
LOS ANGELES - New research from the Center for Cardiac Arrest Prevention in the Smidt Heart Institute has found for the first time that during nighttime hours, women are more likely than men to suffer sudden death due to cardiac arrest. Findings were published in the journal Heart Rhythm.
"Dying suddenly during nighttime hours is a perplexing and devastating phenomenon," said Sumeet Chugh, MD, senior author of the study and director of the Center for Cardiac Arrest Prevention. "We were surprised to discover that being female is an independent predictor of these events."
Medical experts are mystified, Chugh says, because during these late hours, most patients are in a resting state, with reduced metabolism, heart rate and blood pressure.
Sudden cardiac arrest-also called sudden cardiac ...
2021-02-03
LOS ANGELES (Feb. 3, 2021) -- For the first time in humans, investigators at Cedars-Sinai have identified the neurons responsible for canceling planned behaviors or actions--a highly adaptive skill that when lost, can lead to unwanted movements.
Known as "stop signal neurons," these neurons are critical in powering someone to stop or abort an action they have already put in process.
"We have all had the experience of sitting at a traffic stop and starting to press the gas pedal but then realizing that the light is still red and quickly pressing the brake again," said Ueli Rutishauser, PhD, professor of Neurosurgery, Neurology and Biomedical Sciences at Cedars-Sinai and senior author of the study published ...
2021-02-03
NEW YORK and LA JOLLA, CA--A phase 1 clinical trial testing a novel vaccine approach to prevent HIV has produced promising results, IAVI and Scripps Research announced today. The vaccine showed success in stimulating production of rare immune cells needed to start the process of generating antibodies against the fast-mutating virus; the targeted response was detected in 97 percent of participants who received the vaccine.
"This study demonstrates proof of principle for a new vaccine concept for HIV, a concept that could be applied to other pathogens, as well," says William Schief, Ph.D., a professor and immunologist at Scripps Research and executive director of vaccine design at IAVI's Neutralizing Antibody Center, whose laboratory developed the vaccine. "With our many collaborators ...
2021-02-03
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Feb. 3, 2021 - New research on gender inequality indicates that fewer leadership prospects in the workplace apply even to women who show the most promise early on in their academic careers.
Jill Yavorsky, an assistant professor of sociology at UNC Charlotte, co-led the study, "The Under-Utilization of Women's Talent: Academic Achievement and Future Leadership Positions," with Yue Qian, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of British Columbia.
In their paper, published in a leading social science journal, Social Forces, the social scientists discovered that men supervise more individuals ...
2021-02-03
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- A study by Mayo Clinic researchers published in Kidney International Reports finds that immune checkpoint inhibitors, may have negative consequences in some patients, including acute kidney inflammation, known as interstitial nephritis. Immune checkpoint inhibitors are used to treat cancer by stimulating the immune system to attack cancerous cells.
"Immune checkpoint inhibitors have improved the prognosis for patients with a wide range of malignancies including melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer and renal cancer," says Sandra Herrmann, M.D., ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] RUDN University mathematicians developed new approach to 5g base stations operation