The WSSUS (Wide-Sense Stationary Uncorrelated Scattering) model provides a statistical description of the transmission behavior of wireless channels. "Wide-sense stationarity" means the second-order moments of the channel are stationary, which means that they depends only on the time difference, while "uncorrelated scattering" refers to the delay τ due to scatterers. Modelling of mobile channels as WSSUS (wide sense stationary uncorrelated scattering) has become popular among specialists. The model was introduced by Phillip A. Bello in 1963.[1]
A commonly used description of time variant channel applies the set of Bello functions and the theory of stochastic processes.
References
- Kurth, R. R.; Snyder, D. L.; Hoversten, E. V. (1969) "Detection and Estimation Theory", Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Research Laboratory of Electronics, Quarterly Progress Report, No. 93 (IX), 177–205
Primary documents
- Bello, Phillip A., "Characterization of randomly time-variant linear channels", IEEE Transactions on Communications Systems, vol. 11, iss. 4, pp. 360-393, December 1963.
External links
- Wide Sense Stationary Uncorrelated Scattering at www.WirelessCommunication.NL
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