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23rd June 2005 - NTT DoCoMo, Inc. announced today that it
achieved 1Gbps real-time packet transmission in the downlink
at the moving speed of about 20km/h in a field experiment
on fourth-generation (4G) radio access. The experiment took
place in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture on May 9, 2005.
This is the latest achievement in DoCoMo's ongoing development
of key radio access technology for 4G mobile communications.
The 1Gbps real-time packet transmission was realized through
Variable Spreading Factor-Spread Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing (VSF-Spread OFDM) radio access and 4-by-4 Multiple-Input-Multiple-Output
(MIMO) multiplexing using "adaptive selection of surviving
symbol replica candidate" (ASESS) based on Maximum Likelihood
Detection with QR decomposition and the M-algorithm (QRM-MLD),
which was developed by DoCoMo. By using the new algorithm,
DoCoMo was able to reduce the large computational complexity
of the original MLD method while maintaining almost the same
achievable throughput performance. Frequency spectrum efficiency,
which is expressed as information bits per second per Hertz,
is 10 bits per second per Hertz, about 20 times that of 3G
radio networks' spectrum efficiency.
During an earlier trial in July 2003, DoCoMo achieved 100Mbps
and 20Mbps data rate transmission in the downlink and uplink,
respectively, in outdoor environments using the same 100MHz
bandwidth.
DoCoMo will continue to conduct field trials as part of its
program to develop a 4G global standard in cooperation with
the International Telecommunication Union Radiocommunication
Sector. The telecommunications council of Japan's Ministry
of Internal Affairs and Communications aims to see 4G services
commercialized in the country by 2010.
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