- What is a channel equalizer?
- What is channel estimation and equalization?
- What is an equalizer in signal processing?
- What is MMSE equalizer?
What is a channel equalizer?
In telecommunication, equalization is the reversal of distortion incurred by a signal transmitted through a channel. Equalizers are used to render the frequency response—for instance of a telephone line—flat from end-to-end.
What is channel estimation and equalization?
Channel estimation provides information about distortion of the transmission signal when it propagates through the channel. This information is then used by equalizers so that the fading effect and/or co-channel interference can be removed and the original transmitted signal can be restored.
What is an equalizer in signal processing?
An equalizer is a device that can alter the spectral content of a signal. This can be done with any circuit that has an adjustable frequency response, the most familiar being the tone controls on a home stereo set. These tone controls typically affect the amplitude in two frequency regions, the treble and bass.
What is MMSE equalizer?
MMSE as an Equalizer is a kind of post processing algorithm that helps us to figure out the received data that is as close to the original data (transmitted data) as possible. In short, the most important steps in MMSE is to find a matrix G in the following illustration.