From Armstrong, Through Shannon to Massive MIMO: 100 Years of Wireless Technological Progress

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Dr. Thomas L. Marzetta, Bell Labs Fellow at Bell Laboratories, Nokia in Murray Hill, NJ,  will give the Joint Armstrong Memorial Lecture - Electrical Eng. Department Distinguished Lecture "From Armstrong, Through Shannon, to Massive MIMO: 100 Years of Wireless Technological Progress"  at the Davis Auditorium, Columbia University, on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2016, at 11 am. Everyone is welcome to attend. Registration is not required, but it will be helpful to give the organizers an approximate headcount [registration link].

This event is co-sponsored by the IEEE North Jersey/New York Information Theory Society Chapter. 


 

 

 



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 25 Oct 2016
  • Time: 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
  • All times are (GMT-05:00) US/Eastern
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  • Columbia University
  • 116 St and Broadway
  • New York, New York
  • United States 10027
  • Building: Davis Auditorium, Schapiro (CEPSR) Building
  • Click here for Map

  • Contact Event Host
  • Debasis Mitra, Columbia University (http://datascience.columbia.edu/debasis-mitra-1)

    Adriaan J. van Wijngaarden, IEEE New York/North Jersey Information Theory Society Chapter Chair, E-mail: avw@ieee.org

     

    Detailed directions can be found at: http://www.cs.columbia.edu/theory/directions.html

  • Starts 01 September 2016 11:00 AM
  • Ends 25 October 2016 10:30 AM
  • All times are (GMT-05:00) US/Eastern
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. Thomas L. Marzetta Dr. Thomas L. Marzetta of Bell Laboratories, Nokia, Murray Hill, NJ

Topic:

From Armstrong, Through Shannon, to Massive MIMO: 100 Years of Wireless Technological Progress

Abstract - Edwin H. Armstrong invented wideband Frequency Modulation, arguably the first coded modulation scheme, in 1933 – fifteen years before the publication of Claude Shannon’s seminal paper, “A Mathematical Theory of Communication”. A purely analog wireless technology, wideband FM has been estimated to perform as little as 5 dB from the Shannon limit. Modern digital technology enables coded modulation that takes us almost all the way to the Shannon limit, and it has produced amazingly flexible wireless systems at low cost.The ever increasing demand for greater spectral efficiency is being met by exploiting the spatial dimension through multiple antenna (MIMO: Multiple-Input, Multiple-Output) technology, and particularly in what is likely to be its ultimate embodiment, Massive MIMO. Massive MIMO utilizes a large number of individually controlled, physically small, low power antennas to create parallel virtual circuits between the base station and a multiplicity of single antenna users, with huge benefits in terms of spectral efficiency, uniformly great service to all users, and energy efficiency. While Massive MIMO owes a great debt to Shannon theory, in its simplest and most robust form it entails linear multiplexing and de-multiplexing based on direct measurements of the propagation channels. The earliest form of MIMO was proposed in 1919 by E. F. W. Alexanderson, a contemporary of Armstrong, to address the problem of scarce low-frequency (10 kilometer wavelength) spectrum, deemed at that time essential for transoceanic communication.

Biography:

Thomas Marzetta was born in Washington, D.C. He received the PhD and SB in Electrical Engineering from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1978 and 1972, and the MS in Systems Engineering from University of Pennsylvania in 1973. After careers in petroleum exploration at Schlumberger-Doll Research and defense research at Nichols Research Corporation, he joined Bell Labs in 1995 where he is currently a Bell Labs Fellow. Previously he directed the Communications and Statistical Sciences Department within the former Mathematical Sciences Research Center. Dr. Marzetta is on the Advisory Board of MAMMOET (Massive MIMO for Efficient Transmission), an EU-sponsored FP7 project, and he was Coordinator of the GreenTouch Consortium’s Large Scale Antenna Systems Project. He has received awards including the 2015 IEEE Stephen O. Rice Prize, the 2015 IEEE W. R. G. Baker Award, and the 2013 IEEE Guglielmo Marconi Prize Paper Award. He was elected a Fellow of the IEEE in 2003, and he received an Honorary Doctorate from Linköping University in 2015.

Dr. Thomas L. Marzetta of Bell Laboratories, Nokia, Murray Hill, NJ

Topic:

From Armstrong, Through Shannon, to Massive MIMO: 100 Years of Wireless Technological Progress

Biography:






Agenda

The distinguished lecture starts at 11 am in the Davis Auditorium, Columbia University.