347 research outputs found
Robust Beamforming for Secrecy Rate in Cooperative Cognitive Radio Multicast Communications
In this paper, we propose a cooperative approach to improve the security of
both primary and secondary systems in cognitive radio multicast communications.
During their access to the frequency spectrum licensed to the primary users,
the secondary unlicensed users assist the primary system in fortifying security
by sending a jamming noise to the eavesdroppers, while simultaneously protect
themselves from eavesdropping. The main objective of this work is to maximize
the secrecy rate of the secondary system, while adhering to all individual
primary users' secrecy rate constraints. In the case of passive eavesdroppers
and imperfect channel state information knowledge at the transceivers, the
utility function of interest is nonconcave and involved constraints are
nonconvex, and thus, the optimal solutions are troublesome. To address this
problem, we propose an iterative algorithm to arrive at a local optimum of the
considered problem. The proposed iterative algorithm is guaranteed to achieve a
Karush-Kuhn-Tucker solution.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, IEEE ICC 201
Robust Beamforming for Security in MIMO Wiretap Channels with Imperfect CSI
In this paper, we investigate methods for reducing the likelihood that a
message transmitted between two multiantenna nodes is intercepted by an
undetected eavesdropper. In particular, we focus on the judicious transmission
of artificial interference to mask the desired signal at the time it is
broadcast. Unlike previous work that assumes some prior knowledge of the
eavesdropper's channel and focuses on maximizing secrecy capacity, we consider
the case where no information regarding the eavesdropper is available, and we
use signal-to-interference-plus-noise-ratio (SINR) as our performance metric.
Specifically, we focus on the problem of maximizing the amount of power
available to broadcast a jamming signal intended to hide the desired signal
from a potential eavesdropper, while maintaining a prespecified SINR at the
desired receiver. The jamming signal is designed to be orthogonal to the
information signal when it reaches the desired receiver, assuming both the
receiver and the eavesdropper employ optimal beamformers and possess exact
channel state information (CSI). In practice, the assumption of perfect CSI at
the transmitter is often difficult to justify. Therefore, we also study the
resulting performance degradation due to the presence of imperfect CSI, and we
present robust beamforming schemes that recover a large fraction of the
performance in the perfect CSI case. Numerical simulations verify our
analytical performance predictions, and illustrate the benefit of the robust
beamforming schemes.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; to appear, IEEE Transactions on Signal
Processing, 201
Outage Constrained Robust Secure Transmission for MISO Wiretap Channels
In this paper we consider the robust secure beamformer design for MISO
wiretap channels. Assume that the eavesdroppers' channels are only partially
available at the transmitter, we seek to maximize the secrecy rate under the
transmit power and secrecy rate outage probability constraint. The outage
probability constraint requires that the secrecy rate exceeds certain threshold
with high probability. Therefore including such constraint in the design
naturally ensures the desired robustness. Unfortunately, the presence of the
probabilistic constraints makes the problem non-convex and hence difficult to
solve. In this paper, we investigate the outage probability constrained secrecy
rate maximization problem using a novel two-step approach. Under a wide range
of uncertainty models, our developed algorithms can obtain high-quality
solutions, sometimes even exact global solutions, for the robust secure
beamformer design problem. Simulation results are presented to verify the
effectiveness and robustness of the proposed algorithms
On the Design of Artificial-Noise-Aided Secure Multi-Antenna Transmission in Slow Fading Channels
In this paper, we investigate the design of artificial-noise-aided secure
multi-antenna transmission in slow fading channels. The primary design concerns
include the transmit power allocation and the rate parameters of the wiretap
code. We consider two scenarios with different complexity levels: i) the design
parameters are chosen to be fixed for all transmissions, ii) they are
adaptively adjusted based on the instantaneous channel feedback from the
intended receiver. In both scenarios, we provide explicit design solutions for
achieving the maximal throughput subject to a secrecy constraint, given by a
maximum allowable secrecy outage probability. We then derive accurate
approximations for the maximal throughput in both scenarios in the high
signal-to-noise ratio region, and give new insights into the additional power
cost for achieving a higher security level, whilst maintaining a specified
target throughput. In the end, the throughput gain of adaptive transmission
over non-adaptive transmission is also quantified and analyzed.Comment: to appear in IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technolog
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