34 research outputs found
Asymptotically Exact Approximations for the Symmetric Difference of Generalized Marcum-Q Functions
(c) 20xx IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works. DOI: 10.1109/TVT.2014.2337263In this paper, we derive two simple and asymptotically exact approximations for the function defined as ΔQm(a, b) =Δ Qm(a, b) - Qm(b, a). The generalized Marcum Q-function Qm(a, b) appears in many scenarios in communications in this particular form and is referred to as the symmetric difference of generalized Marcum Q-functions or the difference of generalized Marcum Q-functions with reversed arguments. We show that the symmetric difference of Marcum Q-functions can be expressed in terms of a single Gaussian Q-function for large and even moderate values of the arguments a and b. A second approximation for ΔQm(a, b) is also given in terms of the exponential function. We illustrate the applicability of these new approximations in different scenarios: 1) statistical characterization of Hoyt fading; 2) performance analysis of communication systems; 3) level crossing statistics of a sampled Rayleigh envelope; and 4) asymptotic approximation of the Rice Ie-function.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional. Andalucía Tech
Eigenvalue Dynamics of a Central Wishart Matrix with Application to MIMO Systems
We investigate the dynamic behavior of the stationary random process defined
by a central complex Wishart (CW) matrix as it varies along a
certain dimension . We characterize the second-order joint cdf of the
largest eigenvalue, and the second-order joint cdf of the smallest eigenvalue
of this matrix. We show that both cdfs can be expressed in exact closed-form in
terms of a finite number of well-known special functions in the context of
communication theory. As a direct application, we investigate the dynamic
behavior of the parallel channels associated with multiple-input
multiple-output (MIMO) systems in the presence of Rayleigh fading. Studying the
complex random matrix that defines the MIMO channel, we characterize the
second-order joint cdf of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the best and
worst channels. We use these results to study the rate of change of MIMO
parallel channels, using different performance metrics. For a given value of
the MIMO channel correlation coefficient, we observe how the SNR associated
with the best parallel channel changes slower than the SNR of the worst
channel. This different dynamic behavior is much more appreciable when the
number of transmit () and receive () antennas is similar. However, as
is increased while keeping fixed, we see how the best and worst
channels tend to have a similar rate of change.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures and 1 table. This work has been accepted for
publication at IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory. Copyright (c) 2014 IEEE. Personal use
of this material is permitted. However, permission to use this material for
any other purposes must be obtained from the IEEE by sending a request to
[email protected]
Analytic Expressions and Bounds for Special Functions and Applications in Communication Theory
This paper is devoted to the derivation of novel analytic expressions and bounds for a family of special functions that are useful in wireless communication theory. These functions are the well-known Nuttall Q-function, incomplete Toronto function, Rice Ie-function, and incomplete Lipschitz-Hankel integrals. Capitalizing on the offered results, useful identities are additionally derived between the above functions and Humbert, Φ1, function as well as for specific cases of the Kampé de Fériet function. These functions can be considered as useful mathematical tools that can be employed in applications relating to the analytic performance evaluation of modern wireless communication systems, such as cognitive radio, cooperative, and free-space optical communications as well as radar, diversity, and multiantenna systems. As an example, new closed-form expressions are derived for the outage probability over nonlinear generalized fading channels, namely, α-η-μ, α-λ-μ, and α-κ-μ as well as for specific cases of the η-μ and λ-μ fading channels. Furthermore, simple expressions are presented for the channel capacity for the truncated channel inversion with fixed rate and corresponding optimum cutoff signal-to-noise ratio for single-antenna and multiantenna communication systems over Rician fading channels. The accuracy and validity of the derived expressions is justified through extensive comparisons with respective numerical results
On the connection between noncircularly-symmetric and noncentral fading models: univariate and multivariate analysis
This thesis provides new statistical connections between noncircularly-symmetric central and circularly-symmetric noncentral underlying complex Gaussian models. This is particularly interesting since it facilitates the analysis of noncircularly-symmetric models, which are often underused despite their practical interest, since their analysis is more challenging.
Although these statistical connections have a wide range of applications in different areas of univariate and multivariate analysis, this thesis is framed in the context of wireless communications, to jointly analyze noncentral and noncircularly-symmetric fading models. We provide an unified framework for the five classical univariate fading models, i.e. the one-sided Gaussian, Rayleigh, Nakagami-m, Nakagami-q and Rician, and their most popular generalizations, i.e the Rician shadowed, η-µ, κ-µ and κ-µ shadowed. Moreover, we present new simple results regarding the ergodic capacity of single-input single-output systems subject to κ-µ shadowed, κ-µ and η-µ fadings.
With applications to multiple-input multiple-output communications, we are interested in matrices of the form W=XX^H (or W=X^HX), where X is a complex Gaussian matrix with unequal variance in the real and imaginary parts of its entries, i.e., X belongs to the noncircularly-symmetric Gaussian subclass. By establishing a novel connection with the well-known complex Wishart ensemble, we facilitate the statistical analysis of W and give new insights on the effects of such asymmetric variance profile
On the Calculation of the Incomplete MGF with Applications to Wireless Communications
(c) 20xx IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works. DOI: 10.1109/TCOMM.2016.2626440The incomplete moment generating function (IMGF) has paramount relevance in communication theory, since it appears in a plethora of scenarios when analyzing the performance of communication systems. We here present a general method for calculating the IMGF of any arbitrary fading distribution. Then, we provide exact closed-form expressions for the IMGF of the very general κ-μ shadowed fading model, which includes the popular κ-μ, η-μ, Rician shadowed, and other classical models as particular cases. We illustrate the practical applicability of this result by analyzing several scenarios of interest in wireless communications: 1) physical layer security in the presence of an eavesdropper; 2) outage probability analysis with interference and background noise; 3) channel capacity with side information at the transmitter and the receiver; and 4) average bit-error rate with adaptive modulation, when the fading on the desired link can be modeled by any of the aforementioned distributions.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Execelencia Internacional. Andalucía Tech
Slow Fluid Antenna Multiple Access
Fluid antennas offer a novel way to achieve massive connectivity by enabling each user to find a ‘port’ in space where the instantaneous interference undergoes a deep null for multiple access. While this unprecedented capability permits hundreds of users to share the same radio channel, each user needs to switch its best port on a symbol-by-symbol basis, which is impractical. Motivated by this, this paper considers the scenario in which the fluid antenna of each user updates its best port only if the fading channel changes. We refer to this approach as slow fluid antenna multiple access (s-FAMA). In this paper, we first investigate the interference immunity of s-FAMA through analyzing the outage probability. Then an outage probability upper bound is obtained, from which we shed light on the achievable multiplexing gain of the system and unpack the impacts of various system parameters on the performance. Numerical results reveal that despite having a weaker multiplexing power than the symbol-based, fast FAMA (i.e., f-FAMA), spatial multiplexing of 4 users or more is possible if the users’ fluid antennas have large numbers of ports
MGF Approach to the Analysis of Generalized Two-Ray Fading Models
We analyze a class of Generalized Two-Ray (GTR) fading channels that consist
of two line of sight (LOS) components with random phase plus a diffuse
component. We derive a closed form expression for the moment generating
function (MGF) of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for this model, which greatly
simplifies its analysis. This expression arises from the observation that the
GTR fading model can be expressed in terms of a conditional underlying Rician
distribution. We illustrate the approach to derive simple expressions for
statistics and performance metrics of interest such as the amount of fading,
the level crossing rate, the symbol error rate, and the ergodic capacity in GTR
fading channels. We also show that the effect of considering a more general
distribution for the phase difference between the LOS components has an impact
on the average SNR.Comment: 14 pages, 8 Figures and 2 Tables. This work has been accepted for
publication at IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications. Copyright (c)
2014 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to
use this material for any other purposes must be obtained from the IEEE by
sending a request to [email protected]
Predictor Antenna Systems: Exploiting Channel State Information for Vehicle Communications
Vehicle communication is one of the most important use cases in the fifth
generation of wireless networks (5G). The growing demand for quality of service
(QoS) characterized by performance metrics, such as spectrum efficiency, peak
data rate, and outage probability, is mainly limited by inaccurate
prediction/estimation of channel state information (CSI) of the rapidly
changing environment around moving vehicles. One way to increase the prediction
horizon of CSI in order to improve the QoS is deploying predictor antennas
(PAs). A PA system consists of two sets of antennas typically mounted on the
roof of a vehicle, where the PAs positioned at the front of the vehicle are
used to predict the CSI observed by the receive antennas (RAs) that are aligned
behind the PAs. In realistic PA systems, however, the actual benefit is
affected by a variety of factors, including spatial mismatch, antenna
utilization, temporal correlation of scattering environment, and CSI estimation
error. This thesis investigates different resource allocation schemes for the
PA systems under practical constraints.Comment: Licentiate thesis, Chalmers University of Technolog