862 research outputs found
A Unifying Framework for Local Throughput in Wireless Networks
With the increased competition for the electromagnetic spectrum, it is
important to characterize the impact of interference in the performance of a
wireless network, which is traditionally measured by its throughput. This paper
presents a unifying framework for characterizing the local throughput in
wireless networks. We first analyze the throughput of a probe link from a
connectivity perspective, in which a packet is successfully received if it does
not collide with other packets from nodes within its reach (called the audible
interferers). We then characterize the throughput from a
signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratio (SINR) perspective, in which a packet
is successfully received if the SINR exceeds some threshold, considering the
interference from all emitting nodes in the network. Our main contribution is
to generalize and unify various results scattered throughout the literature. In
particular, the proposed framework encompasses arbitrary wireless propagation
effects (e.g, Nakagami-m fading, Rician fading, or log-normal shadowing), as
well as arbitrary traffic patterns (e.g., slotted-synchronous,
slotted-asynchronous, or exponential-interarrivals traffic), allowing us to
draw more general conclusions about network performance than previously
available in the literature.Comment: Submitted for journal publicatio
Communication in a Poisson Field of Interferers -- Part I: Interference Distribution and Error Probability
We present a mathematical model for communication subject to both network
interference and noise. We introduce a framework where the interferers are
scattered according to a spatial Poisson process, and are operating
asynchronously in a wireless environment subject to path loss, shadowing, and
multipath fading. We consider both cases of slow and fast-varying interferer
positions. The paper is comprised of two separate parts. In Part I, we
determine the distribution of the aggregate network interference at the output
of a linear receiver. We characterize the error performance of the link, in
terms of average and outage probabilities. The proposed model is valid for any
linear modulation scheme (e.g., M-ary phase shift keying or M-ary quadrature
amplitude modulation), and captures all the essential physical parameters that
affect network interference. Our work generalizes the conventional analysis of
communication in the presence of additive white Gaussian noise and fast fading,
allowing the traditional results to be extended to include the effect of
network interference. In Part II of the paper, we derive the capacity of the
link when subject to network interference and noise, and characterize the
spectrum of the aggregate interference.Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communication
Modeling Heterogeneous Network Interference Using Poisson Point Processes
Cellular systems are becoming more heterogeneous with the introduction of low
power nodes including femtocells, relays, and distributed antennas.
Unfortunately, the resulting interference environment is also becoming more
complicated, making evaluation of different communication strategies
challenging in both analysis and simulation. Leveraging recent applications of
stochastic geometry to analyze cellular systems, this paper proposes to analyze
downlink performance in a fixed-size cell, which is inscribed within a weighted
Voronoi cell in a Poisson field of interferers. A nearest out-of-cell
interferer, out-of-cell interferers outside a guard region, and cross-tier
interference are included in the interference calculations. Bounding the
interference power as a function of distance from the cell center, the total
interference is characterized through its Laplace transform. An equivalent
marked process is proposed for the out-of-cell interference under additional
assumptions. To facilitate simplified calculations, the interference
distribution is approximated using the Gamma distribution with second order
moment matching. The Gamma approximation simplifies calculation of the success
probability and average rate, incorporates small-scale and large-scale fading,
and works with co-tier and cross-tier interference. Simulations show that the
proposed model provides a flexible way to characterize outage probability and
rate as a function of the distance to the cell edge.Comment: Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, July 2012,
Revised December 201
Wireless Secrecy in Large-Scale Networks
The ability to exchange secret information is critical to many commercial,
governmental, and military networks. The intrinsically secure communications
graph (iS-graph) is a random graph which describes the connections that can be
securely established over a large-scale network, by exploiting the physical
properties of the wireless medium. This paper provides an overview of the main
properties of this new class of random graphs. We first analyze the local
properties of the iS-graph, namely the degree distributions and their
dependence on fading, target secrecy rate, and eavesdropper collusion. To
mitigate the effect of the eavesdroppers, we propose two techniques that
improve secure connectivity. Then, we analyze the global properties of the
iS-graph, namely percolation on the infinite plane, and full connectivity on a
finite region. These results help clarify how the presence of eavesdroppers can
compromise secure communication in a large-scale network.Comment: To appear: Proc. IEEE Information Theory and Applications Workshop
(ITA'11), San Diego, CA, Feb. 2011, pp. 1-10, Invited Pape
- …