Cornerstones of Sampling of Operator Theory
David Walnut, G\"otz E. Pfander, Thomas Kailath

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development of operator sampling theory, highlighting historical context, mathematical advancements, and recent progress in higher-dimensional and stochastic operator identification.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of operator sampling, introduces new results in higher dimensions, and discusses implications for MIMO systems and stochastic operators.
Findings
Mathematical limitations in earlier proofs are addressed using new tools.
Periodically-weighted delta-trains effectively identify operator classes.
Extensions to higher dimensions and stochastic operators are established.
Abstract
This paper reviews some results on the identifiability of classes of operators whose Kohn-Nirenberg symbols are band-limited (called band-limited operators), which we refer to as sampling of operators. We trace the motivation and history of the subject back to the original work of the third-named author in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and to the innovations in spread-spectrum communications that preceded that work. We give a brief overview of the NOMAC (Noise Modulation and Correlation) and Rake receivers, which were early implementations of spread-spectrum multi-path wireless communication systems. We examine in detail the original proof of the third-named author characterizing identifiability of channels in terms of the maximum time and Doppler spread of the channel, and do the same for the subsequent generalization of that work by Bello. The mathematical limitations inherent in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical Analysis and Transform Methods
