Wireless signals look different when observed near to versus far from the transmitter. The notions of near and far also depend on the physical size of the transmitter and receiver, as well as on the wavelength. In this episode, Erik G. Larsson and Emil Björnson discuss these fundamental phenomena and how they can be utilized when designing future communication systems. Concept such as near-field communications, finite-depth beamforming, mutual coupling, and new spatial multiplexing methods such as orbital angular momentum (OAM) are covered. To get more technical details, you can read the paper “A Primer on Near-Field Beamforming for Arrays and Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces” (https://arxiv.org/pdf/2110.06661.pdf). Music: On the Verge by Joseph McDade. Visit Erik’s website https://liu.se/en/employee/erila39 and Emil’s website https://ebjornson.com/
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27. Open Air Interface (With Florian Kaltenberger)
26. Network Slicing
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24. Q&A With 5G and 6G Predictions
23. Wireless Localization and Sensing (With Henk Wymeersch)
21. Wireless Coverage Without Beamforming
20. Wireless Solutions for the Internet of Things (With Liesbet Van der Perre)
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18. Ever-Present Intelligent 6G Communications (With Magnus Frodigh)
17. Energy-Efficient Communications
16. 6G and the Physical Layer (with Angel Lozano)
15. Wireless for Machine Learning (with Carlo Fischione)
14. Q/A on MIMO, NOMA, and THz Communications
13. Distributed and Cell-Free Massive MIMO
12. Privacy and Security in Connectivity (with Panos Papadimitratos)
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