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  2. Intersymbol interference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersymbol_interference

    One of the causes of intersymbol interference is multipath propagation in which a wireless signal from a transmitter reaches the receiver via multiple paths. The causes of this include reflection (for instance, the signal may bounce off buildings), refraction (such as through the foliage of a tree) and atmospheric effects such as atmospheric ducting and ionospheric reflection.

  3. Eye pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_pattern

    The first step of computing an eye pattern is normally to obtain the waveform being analyzed in a quantized form. This may be done by measuring an actual electrical system with an oscilloscope of sufficient bandwidth, or by creating synthetic data with a circuit simulator in order to evaluate the signal integrity of a proposed design.

  4. Pulse shaping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulse_shaping

    Not every filter can be used as a pulse shaping filter. The filter itself must not introduce intersymbol interference — it needs to satisfy certain criteria. The Nyquist ISI criterion is a commonly used criterion for evaluation, because it relates the frequency spectrum of the transmitter signal to intersymbol interference.

  5. Codes for electromagnetic scattering by spheres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codes_for_electromagnetic...

    Other approximations to scattering by a single sphere include: Debye series, ray tracing (geometrical optics), ray tracing including the effects of interference between rays, Airy theory, Rayleigh scattering, diffraction approximation. There are many phenomena related to light scattering by spherical particles such as resonances, surface waves ...

  6. Nyquist ISI criterion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_ISI_criterion

    In communications, the Nyquist ISI criterion describes the conditions which, when satisfied by a communication channel (including responses of transmit and receive filters), result in no intersymbol interference or ISI. It provides a method for constructing band-limited functions to overcome the effects of intersymbol interference.

  7. Root-raised-cosine filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root-raised-cosine_filter

    This helps in constraining the occupied bandwidth of the waveform without introducing intersymbol interference (ISI). The combined response of two such filters is that of the raised-cosine filter . It obtains its name from the fact that its frequency response, H r r c ( f ) {\displaystyle H_{rrc}(f)} , is the square root of the frequency ...

  8. Raised-cosine filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raised-cosine_filter

    The raised-cosine filter is a filter frequently used for pulse-shaping in digital modulation due to its ability to minimise intersymbol interference (ISI). Its name stems from the fact that the non-zero portion of the frequency spectrum of its simplest form (=) is a cosine function, 'raised' up to sit above the (horizontal) axis.

  9. Zero-forcing equalizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-forcing_equalizer

    The zero-forcing equalizer is a form of linear equalization algorithm used in communication systems which applies the inverse of the frequency response of the channel. This form of equalizer was first proposed by Robert Lucky.