Thursday, March 12, 2020
game theroy essays
game theroy essays    Microwave Oven Interference on Wireless LANs     Abstract - Commercial microwave ovens as applied in     restaurants have two magnetron tubes and compared     to domestic kitchen counterparts they spread the     higher RF power and radiated heating energy more     evenly. The domestic kitchen or residential microwave     ovens have only one magnetron tube. The interference     from the commercial type of microwave ovens is more     difficult to characterise than the interference from the     residential ones. The commercial type of microwave     ovens radiate a CW-like interference that sweeps over     tens of MHz during the two bursts per mains power     cycle. The residential ones give a CW-like interference     that has a more or less stable frequency near 2.45 GHz     occurring once per mains power cycle. The impact of     the interference from the commercial type of     microwave ovens on wireless LANs conforming the     IEEE 802.11 standard for both DSSS (direct sequence     spread spectrum) and FHSS (frequency hopping     spread spectrum) has been evaluated.     The release of the 2.4 GHz unlicensed band (2400 -2483.5     MHz) for ISM (industrial, scientific, medical     applications) prompted a significant interest in the design     of wireless LAN products. Interference from extraneous     sources (unintentional radiators) impacts the reliability of     communication in this 2.4 GHz ISM band. Sources of     such interference are the millions of residential     microwave ovens radiating at frequencies close to 2.45     GHz, and they have been described largely in the     literature. Commercial microwave ovens, based on two     magnetron tubes as used in restaurants, have been hardly     described in the literature. Since commercial ovens are     expected more often in the vicinity of office buildings     with a high population density of office equipment and     PCs, this type has been evaluated with respect to the     nature of the interference signal and the impact on     wireless LANs operating ...     
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