Title :
Consecutive point architecture for broadband wireless access networks
Author :
Gulliford, D. ; Carter, J. ; Oltman, D. ; Chow, P.
Author_Institution :
Triton Network Syst. Inc., Orlando, FL, USA
Abstract :
For wireless broadband systems to succeed as a major communication solution in the 21/sup st/ century, they must be the primary communication solution in the bandwidth range of 10-100 Mb/s. This bandwidth range is not effectively served by copper or fiber optic networks. Key technical characteristics of a primary communication network are that it be reliable, maintainable, readily accessible, easy to deploy, cost effective, etc. This paper describes a reliable, maintainable, spectrally efficient wireless network architecture called the "consecutive point" architecture. A consecutive point network consists of a series of consecutive SONET or Ethernet radio hops typically arranged to form a ring. This paper describes the consecutive point wireless network architecture and its advantages which include self-healing, dense deployment, spectral efficiency, single POP manageability, in-service topology changes, and in-service software upgrades. Data from field trials and analysis are provided to support the consecutive point design.
Keywords :
broadband networks; network topology; radio access networks; telecommunication network management; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network routing; 10 to 100 Mbit/s; Ethernet radio hops; SONET hops; alternate routing paths; bandwidth range; broadband wireless access networks; consecutive point wireless network architecture; cost effective network; dense deployment; field analysis data; field trials data; in-service software upgrades; in-service topology changes; maintainable wireless network architecture; primary communication network; reliable network; ring network; self-healing network; single POP manageability; spectrally efficient wireless network architecture; wireless broadband systems; Bandwidth; Communication networks; Computer architecture; Copper; Costs; Maintenance; Optical fiber networks; SONET; Telecommunication network reliability; Wireless networks;
Conference_Titel :
Emerging Technologies Symposium: Broadband, Wireless Internet Access, 2000 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Richardson, TX, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6364-7
DOI :
10.1109/ETS.2000.916533