- How does successive interference cancellation work?
- What is successive interference cancellation in Noma?
- What is interference cancellation method?
- What is imperfect successive interference cancellation?
How does successive interference cancellation work?
Successive Interference Cancellation (SIC) is a technique used by a receiver in a wireless data transmission that allows decoding of two or more packets that arrived simultaneously (in a regular system, more packets arriving at the same time cause a collision).
What is successive interference cancellation in Noma?
A successive interference cancellation receiver is one of the important blocks in non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) transmission. The quality of detection of the strongest user signals often decides about the quality of the whole system and minimizes the error propagation effect.
What is interference cancellation method?
An interference canceller uses a sample of the interfering signal to generate a real-time anti-interference signal that is the exact opposite of the interfering signal as it appears at the receiving antenna. The interference canceller combines the interference and anti-interference signals, cancelling each other out.
What is imperfect successive interference cancellation?
Successive interference cancellation (SIC) is a technique for increasing the capacity of cellular code-division multiple-access (CDMA) systems. To be successful, SIC systems require a specific distribution of the users' received powers, especially in the inevitable event of imperfect interference cancellation.