This standard provides guidance for the specification and performance of an arc-flash hazard analysis, in accordance with the process defined in IEEE Std 1584, IEEE Guide for Performing Arc-Flash Hazard Calculations. It provides the minimum scope and deliverables for an arc-flash study.
This standard specifies methods to validate computational electromagnetics (CEM) computer modeling and simulation (M&S) techniques, codes, and models. It is applicable to a wide variety of electromagnetic (EM) applications including but not limited to the fields of electromagnetic compatibility (EMC), radar cross section (RCS), signal integrity (SI), and antennas. Validation of a particular solution data set can be achieved by comparison to the data set obtained by measurements, alternative… read more codes, canonical methods, or analytic methods. read less
The scope of this standard is to specify the services and interfaces of the WAVE RM, including protective mechanisms for security and privacy, applicable and available to all users of DSRC and WAVE mode operations in the 5.9 GHz band authorized by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) for intelligent transportation systems (ITS). NOTE—This version of the standard does not specify explicitly the details of the security interface. Security provisions are in IEEE Std 1609.2™.1, 2
This guide provides application information and guidance for users who write, develop, implement, and support test requirements, signal definitions, and signal responses using IEEE Std 1641-2010, the signal and test definition (STD) standard.1 Examples of the definition and use of signal models in different environments are included.
This standard is a simplified version and a subset of the IEEE Std 1788TM-2015 for Interval Arithmetic and includes those operations and features of the latter that in the the editors' view are most commonly used in practice. IEEE Std 1788.1-2017 specifies interval arithmetic operations based on intervals whose endpoints are IEEE Std 754TM-2008 binary64 floating point numbers and a decoration system for exception-free computations and propagation of properties of the computed results. A program… read more built on top of an implementation of IEEE Std 1788.1-2017 should compile and run, and give identical output within round off, using an implementation of IEEE Std 1788-2015, or any superset of the former. read less
This standard defines an ontology that allows representation of, reasoning about, and communication of task knowledge in the learning, robotics, and automation domain. This ontology includes a list of essential terms as well as their definitions, attributes, types, structures, properties, constraints, and relationships. In addition, it addresses how hierarchical planners and designers can represent task knowledge, allowing them to better communicate among levels of the ontology hierarchy
This standard provides definitions and explanations of key concepts in the fields of spectrum management, spectrum trading, cognitive radio, dynamic spectrum access, policy-based radio systems, software-defined radio, and related advanced radio system technologies. The document goes beyond simple, short definitions by providing amplifying text that explains these terms in the context of the technologies that use them. The document also describes how these technologies interrelate and create new… read more capabilities while at the same time providing mechanisms supportive of new spectrum management paradigms. This revision to IEEE Std 1900.1-2008 adds additional definitions, modifies existing definitions, and removes outdated definitions; it updates the auxiliary text and informative annexes to reflect new concepts and developments in advanced radio systems; introduces a taxonomy of terms which depicts relationships between definitions and concepts, and updates the document structure to align revised definitions, concepts, and relationships between terms and definitions. read less
This standard specifies physical (PHY) and media access control (MAC) layers of the medium frequency band (less than 12 MHz) broadband power line communication technology for smart grid applications (SGPLC) based on orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) (e.g., FTT and/or wavelet OFDM). This standard coexists with IEEE Std 1901™-2010, IEEE Std 1901.2™-2013 [B1], and IEEE Std 1901.2a™-2015 [B2].1,2 The standard addresses the necessary security requirements that assure communication privacy and allow use for mission critical and security sensitive services and applications. This standard also defines the approach that is geared towards achieving an extended communication range in comparison with the existing power line communication technologies operating in similar frequency bands.
This standard specifies protocols among content delivery (CD) functional entity (FE), service routing (SR) FE, service policy decision (SPD) FE, service discovery and negotiation (SDN) FE, and context information management (CIM) FE to support advanced content delivery capability in next generation service overlay networks. The content delivery capability aims to support content discovery, content cache and storage management, content delivery control, and transport QoS control including… read more context-aware and dynamically adaptive content delivery operations. read less
This standard describes the system-level requirements needed to provide service-level, multi-vendor interoperability of Ethernet Passive Optical Network (EPON) equipment. The specifications complementthe existing IEEE 802.3 and IEEE 802.1 standards, which enable the interoperability at the Physical Layer and Data Link Layer.1 Specifically included in this specification are - EPON system-level interoperability specifications covering equipment functionality, traffic engineering, and service-… read more level quality of service/class of service (QoS/CoS) mechanisms; - Management specifications covering equipment management, service management, and power utilization. read less