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NETW 707 Modeling and Simulation Amr El Mougy Maggie Mashaly

NETW 707 Modeling and Simulation Amr El Mougy Maggie Mashaly. Lecture (8) Network Modeling. Modeling the PHY Layer. Modeling and simulation at the PHY layer are generally concerned with bit or packet error performance Used mainly for transceiver design or wireless channel modeling

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NETW 707 Modeling and Simulation Amr El Mougy Maggie Mashaly

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  1. NETW 707 Modeling and Simulation Amr El Mougy Maggie Mashaly

  2. Lecture(8) Network Modeling

  3. Modeling the PHY Layer • Modeling and simulation at the PHY layer are generally concerned with bit or packet error performance • Used mainly for transceiver design or wireless channel modeling • Wireless propagation is affected by three phenomena: • Reflection • Diffraction • Scattering

  4. Main Causes of Bit Errors • Attenuation: decrease in signal strength at the receiver (decreases signal to noise ratio) • Inter-symbol interference (ISI): caused by delay spread (current symbol is delayed and interferes with the next symbol) • Doppler shift: frequency shift in the received signal due to relative velocities of transmitter and receiver (may cause inter-carrier interference in OFDM systems) • Multipath fading: leads to fluctuations in amplitude, phase and angle of the received signal

  5. Large/Small Scale Fading

  6. Wireless Channel Models:Free Space and Two-Ray • Simplest, no shadowing or fading effects • Free Space: • Two-Ray:

  7. Wireless Channel Models:Log-distance Path Model • Models shadowing effects Path loss at reference distance d0 Normal RV with zero mean and stdσ Path loss exponent

  8. Wireless Channel Models:Rayleigh and Rician • Model multipath fading without/with Line of Sight (LOS) • Rayleigh: • Rician: K-factor = ratio between LOS path and other paths Ω = total power from all paths

  9. Wireless Channel Models:Nakagami-m • Worse performance than Rayleigh • Best fit for urban radio multipath environments m < 1: Worse than Rayleigh fading m = 1: Rayleigh fading m > 1: Better than Rayleigh fading

  10. Modeling the Coverage Range of a Node d

  11. Modeling the Coverage Range of a Node • Transmitted signals are affected by path loss, shadowing, and multi-path fading Path Loss (dB) Path loss alone Path loss and shadowing Path loss, shadowing and multi-path fading d Log (d)

  12. Correlated Shadowing • Links in close proximity experience similar shadowing effects • Degree of correlation depends on several factors such as position of nodes in the coverage area, and the relative position of the nodes from each other • Without considering correlation, connectivity can be over-estimated by large factors (as high as 380%) ρ = 0.24 ρ = 0.21 ρ = 0.05 ρ = 0.01

  13. Correlated Shadowing α = 4 γ = 9 α = 2 γ = 3 α = 2 γ = 6

  14. Topology Modeling • A network can be abstracted as a graph, where vertices represent nodes and edges connect any two nodes that can communicate directly • |E| is the number of edges and |V| is the number of vertices • The average node degree is given by • The probability that a randomly selected node has degree k, called degree distribution where n(k) is the number of nodes with degree k • Poisson, exponential, and power law are commonly used

  15. Common Topology Models • Random graphs: for a fixed number of nodes and probability p, then each two nodes will be connected by an edge with probability p • For large n, the degree distribution follows a Poisson distribution

  16. Common Topology Models • Random graphs do not account for distances between nodes • Random geometric graph: vertices are placed randomly over the grid and an the probability P that an edge connects two nodes u and v is given by L is the maximal distance between two nodes. βdetermines the edge density while α determines the ratio of long to short edges

  17. Common Topology Models • Previous two models have limited clustering effects • Barabasi-Albert graph: evolves network topologies by adding vertices. New vertices prefer to connect with high degree vertices • The probability P that a new vertex attaches to I • Start with m0 connected verticesand a predefined node degree k. Every time period a new vertex is added. This vertex lhas probability P(kl) that itis connected to j randomly selected nodes

  18. Common Topology Models Random Geometric Graph Barabasi-Albert Graph Random Graph

  19. Dijkstra’s Routing Algorithm

  20. Shortest Path Tree • Shortest path tree from u • Forwardingtable for node u:

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