SUMMARY
UCLA researchers have developed a set of source and operation codes for high-throughput (100 Gbps) communication system to approach channel capacity. This technique is unique in that it does not use reverse transmission confirming or denying message reception is provided which saves decoder computational power and improves efficiency especially at/near capacity.
BACKGROUND
There is a growing demand for data drives and better performance over difficult (noisy) channels. Throughput (digital bandwidth consumption) is the rate of production, or the rate at which something can be processed (the rate of successful message delivery over a communication channel). Maximum theoretical throughput is closely related to the channel capacity of the system, specifically the maximum possible quantity of data that can be transmitted under ideal circumstances. Systems constrained to hard decoding use more resources and have limited capabilities at/near capacity. This invention is a new method for short block communication without feedback that allows for improved performance and efficiency of high-throughput communication.
INNOVATION
UCLA researchers have developed a set of source and operation codes, using short-block length convolutional codes, for high-throughput (100 Gbps) communication system to approach channel capacity. It uses an ideal block-length to maximize throughput, while maintaining an acceptable error rate and signal to noise ratio. Incremental redundancy without feedback is modeled after Gaussian approximation and used in place of ACK or NACK messages (signals for successful or unsuccessful data reception). A low-density parity-check (LDPC) code (linear error correcting code) is used as the method of transmitting a message over a noisy transmission channel. This invention represents an alternative to current hard-decoding. This tech allows higher duty cycles, closer to capacity while meeting frame rate error requirements for communication.
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