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Space–time code

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A space–time code (STC) is a method employed to improve the reliability of data transmission in wireless communication systems using multiple transmit antennas. STCs rely on transmitting multiple, redundant copies of a data stream to the receiver in the hope that at least some of them may survive the physical path between transmission and reception in a good enough state to allow reliable decoding.

Space time codes may be split into two main types:

STC may be further subdivided according to whether the receiver knows the channel impairments. In coherent STC, the receiver knows the channel impairments through training or some other form of estimation. These codes have been studied more widely because they are less complex than their non-coherent counterparts. In noncoherent STC the receiver does not know the channel impairments but knows the statistics of the channel.<ref name="hm">Marzetta, T.L. and Hochwald, B.M. (January 1999). "Capacity of a mobile multiple-antenna communication link in Rayleigh flat fading". IEEE Transactions of Information Theory 45 (1): 139–157. DOI:10.1109/18.746779.</ref> In differential space–time codes neither the channel nor the statistics of the channel are available.<ref name="jsac">V. Tarokh and H. Jafarkhani (July 2000). "A Differential Detection Scheme for Transmit Diversity". IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications 18 (7). DOI:10.1109/49.857917.</ref>

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