Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Notation
- 1 Overview of Wireless Communications
- 2 Path Loss and Shadowing
- 3 Statistical Multipath Channel Models
- 4 Capacity of Wireless Channels
- 5 Digital Modulation and Detection
- 6 Performance of Digital Modulation over Wireless Channels
- 7 Diversity
- 8 Coding for Wireless Channels
- 9 Adaptive Modulation and Coding
- 10 Multiple Antennas and Space-Time Communications
- 11 Equalization
- 12 Multicarrier Modulation
- 13 Spread Spectrum
- 14 Multiuser Systems
- 15 Cellular Systems and Infrastructure-Based Wireless Networks
- 16 Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
- Appendix A Representation of Bandpass Signals and Channels
- Appendix B Probability Theory, Random Variables, and Random Processes
- Appendix C Matrix Definitions, Operations, and Properties
- Appendix D Summary of Wireless Standards
- Bibliography
- Index
13 - Spread Spectrum
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Notation
- 1 Overview of Wireless Communications
- 2 Path Loss and Shadowing
- 3 Statistical Multipath Channel Models
- 4 Capacity of Wireless Channels
- 5 Digital Modulation and Detection
- 6 Performance of Digital Modulation over Wireless Channels
- 7 Diversity
- 8 Coding for Wireless Channels
- 9 Adaptive Modulation and Coding
- 10 Multiple Antennas and Space-Time Communications
- 11 Equalization
- 12 Multicarrier Modulation
- 13 Spread Spectrum
- 14 Multiuser Systems
- 15 Cellular Systems and Infrastructure-Based Wireless Networks
- 16 Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
- Appendix A Representation of Bandpass Signals and Channels
- Appendix B Probability Theory, Random Variables, and Random Processes
- Appendix C Matrix Definitions, Operations, and Properties
- Appendix D Summary of Wireless Standards
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Although bandwidth is a valuable commodity in wireless systems, increasing the transmit signal bandwidth can sometimes improve performance. Spread spectrum is a technique that increases signal bandwidth beyond the minimum necessary for data communication. There are many reasons for doing this. Spread-spectrum techniques can hide a signal below the noise floor, making it difficult to detect. Spread spectrum also mitigates the performance degradation due to intersymbol and narrowband interference. In conjunction with a RAKE receiver, spread spectrum can provide coherent combining of different multipath components. Spread spectrum also allows multiple users to share the same signal bandwidth, since spread signals can be superimposed on top of each other and demodulated with minimal interference between them. Finally, the wide bandwidth of spread-spectrum signals is useful for location and timing acquisition.
Spread spectrum first achieved widespread use in military applications because of its inherent property of hiding the spread signal below the noise floor during transmission, its resistance to narrowband jamming and interference, and its low probability of detection and interception. For commercial applications, the narrowband interference resistance has made spread spectrum common in cordless phones. The ISI rejection and bandwidth-sharing capabilities of spread spectrum are very desirable in cellular systems and wireless LANs. As a result, spread spectrum is the basis for both second- and third-generation cellular systems as well as second-generation wireless LANs.
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- Wireless Communications , pp. 403 - 451Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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