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Wireless Information Networks: Architecture, Resource Management, and Mobile Data PDF

396 Pages·1996·11.399 MB·English
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WIRELESS INFORMATION NETWORKS Architecture, Resource Management, and Mobile Data THE KLUWER INTERNATIONAL SERIES IN ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION THEORY Consulting Editor Robert Gallager Other books in the series: DIGITAL IMAGE COMPRESSION: Algorithms and Standards, Weidong Kou ISBN: 0-7923-9626-X CONTROL AND PERFORMANCE IN PACKET, CIRCUIT, AND ATM NE1WORKS, XueDao Gu, Kazem Sohraby and Dhadesugoor R. Vaman ISBN: 0-7923-9625-1 DISCRETE STOCHASTIC PROCESSES, Robert G. Gallager ISBN: 0-7923-9583-2 WIRELESS PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS: Research Developments, Brian D. Woerner, Theodore S. Rappaport and Jeffrey H. Reed ISBN: 0-7923-9555-7 PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN OF INTEGRATED SERVICES DIGITAL NE1WORKS, A. Nejat Ince, Dag Wilhelmsen and Biilent Sankur ISBN: 0-7923-9554-9 WIRELESS INFRARED COMMUNICATIONS, John R. Barry ISBN: 0-7923-9476-3 COMMUNICATIONS AND CRYPTOGRAPHY: Two sides of One Tapestry, Richard E. Blahut, Daniel J. Costello, Jr., Ueli Maurer and Thomas Minelholzer ISBN: 0-7923-9469-0 WIRELESS AND MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS, Jack M. Holtzman and David J. Goodman ISBN: 0-7923-9464-X INTRODUCTION TO CONVOLUTIONAL CODES WITH APPLICATIONS, Ajay Dholakia ISBN: 0-7923-9467-4 CODED-MODULATION TECHNIQUES FOR FADING CHANNELS, S. Hamidreza Jamali, and Tho Le-Ngoc ISBN: 0-7923-9421-6 WIRELESS PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS: Trends and Challenges, Theodore S. Rappaport, Brian D. Woerner, Jeffrey H. Reed ISBN: 0-7923-9430-5 ELLIPTIC CURVE PUBLIC KEY CRYPTOSYSTEMS, Alfred Menezes ISBN: 0-7923-9368-6 SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS: Mobile and Fixed Services, Michael Miller, Branka Vucetic and Les Berry ISBN: 0-7923-9333-3 WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS: Future Directions, Jack M. Holtzman and David J. Goodman ISBN: 0-7923-9316-3 DISCRETE-TIME MODELS FOR COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS INCLUDING ATM, Herwig Bruneel and Byung G. Kim ISBN: 0-7923-9292-2 APPLICATIONS OF FINITE FIELDS, Alfred J. Menezes, Ian F. Blake, XuHong Gao, Ronald C. Mullin, Scott A. Vanstone, Tomik Yaghoobian ISBN: 0-7923-9282-5 WIRELESS PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS, Martin J. Feuerstein, Theodore S. Rappaport ISBN: 0-7923-9280-9 SEQUENCE DETECTION FOR HIGH-DENSITY STORAGE CHANNEL, Jaekyun Moon, L. Richard Carley ISBN: 0-7923-9264-7 DIGITAL SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES: Military and Civil Applications, A. Nejat Ince ISBN: 0-7923-9254-X IMAGE AND TEXT COMPRESSION, James A. Storer ISBN: 0-7923-9243-4 VECTOR QUANTIZATION AND SIGNAL COMPRESSION, Allen Gersho, Robert M. Gray ISBN: 0-7923-9181-0 WIRELESS INFORMATION NETWORKS Architecture, Resource Management, and Mobile Data edited by Jack M. Holtzman Rutgers University WINLAB (Wireless Information Network Laboratory) ~. " KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS Boston / Dordrecht / London Distributors for North America: Kluwer Academic Publishers 101 Philip Drive Assinippi Park Norwell, Massachusetts 02061 USA Distributors for all other countries: Kluwer Academic Publishers Group Distribution Centre Post Office Box 322 3300 AH Dordrecht, THE NETHERLANDS Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A c.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN-13: 978-1-4612-8583-0 e-ISBN-13: 978-1-4613-1353-3 DOl: 10.1007/978-1-4613-1353-3 Copyright <!:> 1996 by Kluwer Academic Publishers Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1s t edition 1996 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical. photo-copying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 101 Philip Drive, Assinippi Park. Norwell, Massachusetts 02061 Printed on acid-free paper. TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE ix I. ARCHITECTURE 1. Issues in Wireless Access 1 Broadband Networks Mahllwud Naghshineh, Mischa Schwartz and Anthony S. Acampora 2. An A TM Based PCS/Cellular 21 Architecture Bharat T Doshi and Anil Sawkar 3. A Distributed, Mohile Wireless 39 Infrastructure for Multimedia Applications Mario Gerla, Jack Tzu-Chieh Tsai, Nicholas Bambos and Slwu C. Chen 4. Issues in Developing Functional 55 Model(s) for Future Mohile Communication Networks Elisabeth Bui, Alain Chllrbonnier anti Jean-Christian Benard-Dentle 5. Mohility Support in a Wireless 71 ATM Network R. Yuan, S. Biswas and D. Raychaudhuri 6. Adaptive Paging Algorithms for 83 Cellular Systems Seshu Madhavapeddy, Kalyan Basu am:! Allison Roherts VI II. RADIO RESOURCE MANAGEMENT 7. Distributed Measurement-based 103 Dynamic Channel Assignment for Wireless Personal Communications Matthew M-L Cheng and Justin C-/ Chuang 8. Distributed Radio Resource Allocation 117 in Highway Microcellular Systems Michael Andersin. Magnus Frodigh and Kai-Erik Sunell 9. Handover Performance: Propagation 133 and Traffic Issues Gamini Senarath aml David Everitt 10. A Simple Analysis of CDMA Soft 155 Handoff Gain and its Effect on the Cell's Coverage Area Pulin R. Patel. Usman S. Goni. Eric Miller and Paul P.S. Carter 11. An Algorithm for Capacity Allocation 173 in Cellular Spread Spectrum Networks with NonUniform Traffic Loadings Stephen Hanly 12. Uplink Power Control for CDMA 189 Cellular Systems Roy D. Yates 13. A Distrihuted Power Control Algorithm 201 for Bursty Transmissions on Cellular, Spread Spectrum Wireless Networks Debasi.\' Mitra and John A. Morrison 14. Soft Admission in Cellular PCS with 213 Constrained Power M. Andersin. Z. Rosberg and J. Zamler Vll III. ACCESS 15. Performance Analysis of Capture 233 Division Packetized Access (CDPA) for Cellular Systems Flaminio Borgonovo. Luigi Fratta and Michele Zorzi 16. A Novel Radio Channel Control Method 249 for Improved Multiple Access Schemes Q. Cao and M.K. Gurcan 17. Successive Interference Cancellation 265 Schemes in Multi-Rate DS/CDMA Systems Ann-Louise .Tohimsson and Arne Svensson 18. A New Distributed Reservation Multiple 281 Access Scheme for the AVPAC Channel Sanj ay Singh. Mario Gerla and Steve Friedman 19. Network Simulations for IS-95 CDMA 297 Systems Szu-Wei Wang and Hua Mary Chion IV. MOBILE DATA, MOBILE NETWORKS 20. Cellular Wideband Mobile Data 313 Communications Zhichun Honkasalo and .Tari Ha1/lalainen 21. Experimental Results From 327 Internetworking Data Applications Over Various Wireless Networks Using a Single Flexible Error Control Protocol A.J. McAuley. D.S. Pinck. T. Kanai. M. Kramer. G. Ramirez. H. Tohme and and L. Tong viii 22. Radio Link Protocols for Cellular 343 Data Rharat T. Doshi, Richard P. Ejzak and Sanjiv Nanda 23. An Asymmetric Cost Model for 363 Query Processing in Mobile Computing Environments Ravi Jain and Narayanan Krishnakumar 24. An Efficient Approach to Updating 379 Replicated Databases in Wireless and Advanced Intelligent Networks Kin K. Leung INDEX 395 PREFACE In April 1995, WINLAB (the Wireless Infonnation Network Lab oratory at Rutgers University) hosted the Fifth WINLAB Workshop on Third Generation Wireless Infonnation Networks. This workshop brings together a select group of experts interested in the future of Personal Communications, Mobile Computing and other services supported by wireless communications. As a sequel to Kluwer books on previous WINLAB workshops,l this volume assembles written versions of presentations of the Fifth Workshop. The last few years have been exciting for the field of wireless communications. The second generation systems that have absorbed our attention during those years are becoming commercial realities. Everyone is looking forward to PCS, especially in light of the recent auctions. We see an explosion of technical alternatives for meeting the demand for wireless communications. We also have applications in search of the best technologies rather than the reverse. The papers included provide new insights into many of the issues needing resolution for the successful introduction of the new services by the end of the decade. The authors represent views from both industry and universities from a number of nations. They are grouped into four main categories: Architecture, Radio Resource Management, Access, and Mobile Data, Mobile Networks. The Architecture papers provide discussion of fundamental issues concerned with wireless services that are provided to mobile users and which must use the fixed network. Cmcial issues are how broadband services (with diverse requirements) will be accommodated by the wireless link, and how they will be integrated S. Nemda emd D.J. Goodrmm, ed. 711ird Generation Wireless Information Networks, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1991, Norwell, MA. LM. Holtzman and D.J. Goodman, ed., Wireless Communications; Future Directions, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1993, Norwell, MA. LM. Holtzmem and D.J. Goodmem, ed., Wireless and Mobile Communications, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994, Norwell, MA. x with ATM. Issues that need resolution include detennining the point at which AT M cell fonnal.;; will start to be employed, and supporting mobility with ATM. The Radio Resource Management papers are concerned with channel assignment, power control, handoff and admission control. Further understanding of these issues individually is needed and, furthermore, the optimal combination of them is not well understood at all. The papers provide valuable insights into these issues. Everyone is aware of the importance of access from the recent and ongoing debate between TDMA and COMA. The papers in the Access section provide new studies of evaluating and improving access methods. Mobility provides entirely new challenges for technologists. Infonnation storage and access for mobile users need new solutions from database and processing viewpoints. Providing data services, with stringent perfonnance requirements, over hostile radio environments, and to and from mobile users present fonnidable challenges. New approaches in these areas are covered in the section on Mobile Data, Mobile Networks. While the papers are organized into sections, there is strong overlap between the sections. For example, distributed systems is a recUlTing theme. While specific problems in, e.g., communications theory or propagation, remain important areas of investigation, the overall systems issues present entirely new challenges. It is hoped that this volume will contribute to the solution of these problems. Jack M. Holtzman WINLABI Rutgers University Acknowledgment We are very grateful to Noreen DeCarlo for invaluable help with the Workshop and in the preparation of this volume.

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