NYU WIRELESS
Founded | 2012 |
---|---|
Headquarters | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
Theodore Rappaport Dennis Shasha Sundeep Rangan Daniel K. Sodickson |
Website |
nyuwireless |
NYU WIRELESS.[1] is a research center at New York University (NYU) focused on future challenges and applications of wireless technologies. The center brings together wireless students and faculty across NYU with expertise in circuit design, millimeter wave(mmWave) wireless communications,[2][3] signal processing, distributed networking and computing, and many branches of medicine.[4] Launched in early 2012, the center consists of over 100 graduate and undergraduate students and 25 faculty participating in various research activities.
On average, the center conducts about $10 million a year in funded research[5] from its industrial affiliates, the National Science Foundation (NSF),[6] the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the United States Department of Defense (DOD). The center is composed of students and faculty from NYU’s Courant Computer Science department, NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering’s Electrical and Computer engineering department and many different branches of NYU School of Medicine.
Administration
Dr. Theodore (Ted) S. Rappaport is the founding director of NYU WIRELESS, having worked in wireless since the late 1980s first at Virginia Tech and then at UT Austin. Joining NYU WIRELESS as associate Directors are Prof. Sundeep Rangan, representing NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering’s Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, Prof. Dennis Shasha, representing the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at NYU, and Prof. Daniel Sodickson, representing the NYU School of Medicine faculty[7]
Facilities
NYU WIRELESS is located at 2 MetroTech Center on the campus of NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering. It has opened 13,500 square feet of research space, which combines research in wireless technologies, computing and medical applications.[8] The facility contains four fully equipped laboratories to conduct research, mostly focussed on millimeter waves. It is also equipped with over 75 student workstations, and provides a dedicated workplace for NYU WIRELESS student researchers and faculty to work.[9] The NYU WIRELESS laboratories contain a wide range of instruments including FPGA development platforms, channel sounders, signal generators, vector network analyzers, spectrum analyzers, and semiconductor probe stations. The lab is designed for and fully equipped to perform communications, networking, and signal processing research for fifth generation (5G) wireless.
Industrial Affiliates
Companies seeking industrial affiliate membership are provided with access to the center's students, faculty, staff and wireless research facilities.[10]
Current Industrial Affiliate Member Companies:
- Samsung
- L-3 Communications
- National Instruments
- Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.[11]
- Nokia[12]
- AT&T Inc[13]
- Huawei Technologies
- Intel Corporation[14][15]
- Ericsson[16]
- Straight Path Communications[17][18]
- Keysight Technologies[19]
- Silicon Image Inc
Research
The Center’s Faculty are experts in information theory, video coding and processing, DSP and simulation, algorithms, networking, circuits, and RF propagation and antennas along with the medical researchers and clinical specialists from NYU Langone School of Medicine. NYU WIRELESS has state-of-the art RF/Analog circuit design, simulation, and hardware testing capabilities for semiconductor devices up to 220 GHz.[20]
Current projects:
- Power Consumption of A/D Converters in Millimeter-Wave Systems
- Millimeter Wave Radiation and Biological Health effects on Humans
- Millimeter Wave MAC Layer Design
- Millimeter Wave 5G Prototype and Channel Sounder
- 3D 28 GHz and 73 GHz measurements and models
- Spatial Channel Estimation and Tracking
- Stochastic Congestion Control Protocols for High End-to-End Throughput in Next Generation Cellular Networks
- mmWave Propagation Database
References
- ↑ "New Academic Wireless Research Center to Open at NYU-Poly -- Campus Technology". campustechnology.com.
- ↑ "NYU Wireless' Rappaport envisions a 5G, millimeter-wave future". FierceWirelessTech.
- ↑ "Race to 5G wireless heats up with new measurements, models, and math". phys.org.
- ↑ "Wireless health research center opens in NYC". Clinical Innovation + Technology.
- ↑ "New York University - 5G News . org". 5G News . org.
- ↑ "Searching for 5G". EETimes.
- ↑ "Staff". nyuwireless.com.
- ↑ Anjali Athavaley (8 August 2012). "Wireless Center for NYU Poly". WSJ.
- ↑ "NYU Wireless And Ericsson Join Forces To Speed Development Of 5G Mobile Technology". TheStreet.
- ↑ "Industrial Affiliates". nyuwireless.com.
- ↑ "Qualcomm Technologies Joins NYU WIRELESS Research Center". nyu.edu.
- ↑ "NSN joins 5G research at NYU Wireless". FierceWirelessTech.
- ↑ ad-hoc-news.de. "ATT Joins NYU WIRELESS to Develop Next-Generation Mobile Network Technology :: AD HOC NEWS". ad-hoc-news.de.
- ↑ "NYU WIRELESS Welcomes Intel As Industry Affiliate". MarketWatch.
- ↑ "Intel joins other industry giants to fund NYU Wireless research". Technical.ly.
- ↑ "Ericsson, NSN and NYU Wireless ramp up 5G efforts". FierceWirelessTech.
- ↑ "Tech Stocks Maintaining Moderate Gains; Straight Path Rising After Partnering With NYU Research Center". NASDAQ.com. 30 April 2014.
- ↑ "Straight Path Spectrum Joins NYU Wireless -- Campus Technology". campustechnology.com.
- ↑ Kelly Hill. "After spin-off, Keysight strikes out on its own". RCR Wireless News.
- ↑ "Research". nyuwireless.com.
- http://technical.ly/brooklyn/2015/01/29/nyu-wireless-fcc-5g/
- http://searchtelecom.techtarget.com/news/2240241231/Where-5G-technology-is-headed-and-when
- http://electronicdesign.com/test-measurement/new-instruments-target-5g-testing
- http://engineering.nyu.edu/press-release/2015/01/14/race-5g-nyu-wireless-researchers-file-comments-fcc-shape-future-wireless
- http://www.networkworld.com/article/2687165/wireless/how-new-radio-tech-will-solve-the-upcoming-spectrum-crunch.html?source=NWWNLE_nlt_review_2014-09-26#tk.rss_all
- http://www.fiercewireless.com/tech/story/nyu-researchers-make-waves-millimeter-wave-breakthrough/2014-12-05
- http://phys.org/news/2014-12-5g-wireless-math.html