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Yoshitaka HARA Kazuyoshi OSHIMA
This paper studies a multiband mobile communication system to support both high data rate services and wide service coverage, using high and low frequency resources with different propagation characteristics. In the multiband system, multiple frequency bands are managed by a base station and one of the frequency bands is adaptively allocated to a terminal depending on his channel quality. By limiting the low frequency resources to a terminal not covered by the higher frequencies, the presented multiband system can accommodate many terminals providing wide coverage area, as if all radio resources have low frequency. From numerical results, the multiband system can provide wide service coverage area for much larger number of terminals than conventional systems. It is also found that an appropriate balance of multiple frequency resources is essential to achieve high capacity.
Shaokai YU Won-Sik YOON Yong-Deak KIM Chae-Woo LEE Jae-Hyun KIM
Radio resource is the bottleneck for current multimedia wireless networks. Intelligent traffic control strategies can be enforced to optimize resource allocation so as to enhance network performance. In this study, dynamic control scheme for non-real-time traffic and autonomic control schemes for multimedia traffic are proposed to guarantee the required quality of service (QoS) in the inference-dominated high-speed wireless environment. Both handoff priority and terminal mobility are also taken into consideration. The performance of the state-dependent multidimensional birth-death process is derived by the efficient matrix-analytic methods (MAMs). Compared with the previous results, this paper shows that the proposed control methods can be used for both real-time and non-real-time multimedia traffic in order to meet the required performance without degrading the quality of multimedia services. These results are also important for the design of evolving multimedia wireless systems as well as network optimization.