1,423 research outputs found
Coexistence Analysis between Radar and Cellular System in LoS Channel
Sharing spectrum with incumbents such as radar systems is an attractive
solution for cellular operators in order to meet the ever growing bandwidth
requirements and ease the spectrum crunch problem. In order to realize
efficient spectrum sharing, interference mitigation techniques are required. In
this letter we address techniques to mitigate MIMO radar interference at MIMO
cellular base stations (BSs). We specifically look at the amount of power
received at BSs when radar uses null space projection (NSP)-based interference
mitigation method. NSP reduces the amount of projected power at targets that
are in-close vicinity to BSs. We study this issue and show that this can be
avoided if radar employs a larger transmit array. In addition, we compute the
coherence time of channel between radar and BSs and show that the coherence
time of channel is much larger than the pulse repetition interval of radars.
Therefore, NSP-based interference mitigation techniques which depends on
accurate channel state information (CSI) can be effective as the problem of CSI
being outdated does not occur for most practical scenarios.Comment: Corrected some typos and reference
MU-MIMO Communications with MIMO Radar: From Co-existence to Joint Transmission
Beamforming techniques are proposed for a joint multi-input-multi-output
(MIMO) radar-communication (RadCom) system, where a single device acts both as
a radar and a communication base station (BS) by simultaneously communicating
with downlink users and detecting radar targets. Two operational options are
considered, where we first split the antennas into two groups, one for radar
and the other for communication. Under this deployment, the radar signal is
designed to fall into the null-space of the downlink channel. The communication
beamformer is optimized such that the beampattern obtained matches the radar's
beampattern while satisfying the communication performance requirements. To
reduce the optimizations' constraints, we consider a second operational option,
where all the antennas transmit a joint waveform that is shared by both radar
and communications. In this case, we formulate an appropriate probing
beampattern, while guaranteeing the performance of the downlink communications.
By incorporating the SINR constraints into objective functions as penalty
terms, we further simplify the original beamforming designs to weighted
optimizations, and solve them by efficient manifold algorithms. Numerical
results show that the shared deployment outperforms the separated case
significantly, and the proposed weighted optimizations achieve a similar
performance to the original optimizations, despite their significantly lower
computational complexity.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. This work has been submitted to the IEEE for
possible publication. Copyright may be transferred without notice, after
which this version may no longer be accessibl
Massive MIMO is a Reality -- What is Next? Five Promising Research Directions for Antenna Arrays
Massive MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) is no longer a "wild" or
"promising" concept for future cellular networks - in 2018 it became a reality.
Base stations (BSs) with 64 fully digital transceiver chains were commercially
deployed in several countries, the key ingredients of Massive MIMO have made it
into the 5G standard, the signal processing methods required to achieve
unprecedented spectral efficiency have been developed, and the limitation due
to pilot contamination has been resolved. Even the development of fully digital
Massive MIMO arrays for mmWave frequencies - once viewed prohibitively
complicated and costly - is well underway. In a few years, Massive MIMO with
fully digital transceivers will be a mainstream feature at both sub-6 GHz and
mmWave frequencies. In this paper, we explain how the first chapter of the
Massive MIMO research saga has come to an end, while the story has just begun.
The coming wide-scale deployment of BSs with massive antenna arrays opens the
door to a brand new world where spatial processing capabilities are
omnipresent. In addition to mobile broadband services, the antennas can be used
for other communication applications, such as low-power machine-type or
ultra-reliable communications, as well as non-communication applications such
as radar, sensing and positioning. We outline five new Massive MIMO related
research directions: Extremely large aperture arrays, Holographic Massive MIMO,
Six-dimensional positioning, Large-scale MIMO radar, and Intelligent Massive
MIMO.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Digital Signal Processin
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