NYU WIRELESS has developed what is thought to be the world’s first commercial emulator for 5G millimeter wave (mm-Wave) systems. The emulator differs from the existing paradigm because it performs not only the emulation of the wireless channel, but also of the beamforming antenna arrays on both the transmitter and receiver devices under test (TX and …
Researchers at CATT and NYU Wireless have built the world’s first wireless emulator suitable for 5G systems that feature massive bandwidths and hundreds of antenna elements. In this unique patent pending design, the solution emulates not only the wireless channel, but also the beamformers (or phased-arrays) on both the transmitter and receiver devices under test (DUTs). This joint emulation …
This month marks the fifth anniversary of the launch of NYU WIRELESS, a multidisciplinary research center founded in 2012 to develop the fundamental theories and techniques for next-generation mass-deployable wireless devices across a wide range of applications and markets. In the years that followed, it has become central to the remarkably rapid adoption of technologies …
Read the latest addition of our newsletter, The Pulse. July 2017 In this issue: Welcome to Our New Affiliates NYU WIRELESS to Bring Ultra-Speed Wireless Connectivity to First Responders The NYU Tandon School of Engineering Dante Youla Award Given to George MacCartney NYU WIRELESS-Led Paper Wins Neal Shepherd Propagation Prize NI Donates Nearly $1 …
Rapidly increasing demands for higher mobile data rates and ubiquitous data access have led to a spectrum crunch over the traditional wireless communication frequency bands. Luckily, Tandon doctoral candidate Shu Sun explains that new spectrum allocations in the millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequency bands are helping to alleviate the shortage and allowing for the development of the fifth-generation (5G) wireless …
The IEEE Vehicular Technology Society board of directors recently announced that the NYU WIRELESS-led paper, “Investigation of Prediction Accuracy, Sensitivity, and Parameter Stability of Large-Scale Propagation Path Loss Models for 5G Wireless Communications,” is the winner of the 2017 Neal Shepherd Propagation Prize. The May 2016 paper, led by NYU WIRELESS graduate student Shu Sun, compared three …
In an interview with RCR Wireless News, NYU WIRELESS Director Sundeep Rangan, Program Director Marco Mezzavilla, and researcher Aditya Dhananjay spoke about how the recent NIST award they received will be put into action to help first responders. “There’s been a lot of interest in using cellular technologies for the purpose of public safety — …
The federal government likes what’s going on at NYU Tandon, a $2.2 million grant to the university’s 5G wireless program would suggest. The grant comes from the U.S. Commerce Department’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which announced earlier this week grants totaling $38.5 million to 33 universities and corporations to help research and design …
Researchers met in San Antonio, Texas yesterday to jump-start technology that could enable first responders to relay video in moving ambulances, employ virtual reality in emergencies, receive high-definition images from drones in real time, or control robots in restricted indoor environments too dangerous for humans. Although the technology of ultra-fast fifth-generation, or 5G, wireless communication …
The U.S. Commerce Department’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has awarded $38.5 million to 33 research and development (R&D) projects aimed at advancing broadband communications technologies for first responders. The awardees and their projects are: Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) – $782,280 An Infrastructure-Free Localization System for Firefighters Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) …