CDF Channel
CDF Channel
CDF (Cumulative Distribution Function): This is like keeping track of all your coin flips. It
tells you the overall chance of getting heads (strong signal) up to a certain point. Imagine
flipping 10 times. The CDF at "5 flips heads" would tell you the probability of getting heads
on 5 or fewer flips out of those 10.
While negative signal strength doesn't make sense physically, mathematically, it helps
ensure we capture all the relevant probabilities. Integrating the PDF from negative infinity to
a specific value (x) essentially sums up the probabilities of all fading levels less than or equal
to x. This is because the integral considers the area under the PDF curve, and that area
represents the cumulative probability.
Moment generating function (MGF) of the channel
MGF Contains various information like mean, variance etc. using that
equation with some value assumption mean, mode or variance different
parameters can be calculated.
The moment-generating function (MGF) of a communication channel is a
powerful tool that captures important characteristics of the channel's fading
behavior in a single function.
Imagine a function, denoted by M_X(t), where X is the random variable
representing the fading level in the channel, and t is a variable that we can
manipulate. The MGF is defined as the expected value (average) of an
exponential term raised to the power of t times the fading level (X).