1,100 research outputs found
On the Sum of Fisher-Snedecor F Variates and its Application to Maximal-Ratio Combining
Capitalizing on the recently proposed Fisher-Snedecor F composite fading
model, in this letter, we investigate the sum of independent but not
identically distributed (i.n.i.d.) Fisher-Snedecor F variates. First, a novel
closed-form expression is derived for the moment generating function of the
instantaneous signal-to-noise ratio. Based on this, the corresponding
probability density function and cumulative distribution function of the sum of
i.n.i.d. Fisher- Snedecor F variates are derived, which are subsequently
employed in the analysis of multiple branch maximal-ratio combining (MRC).
Specifically, we investigate the impact of multipath and shadowed fading on the
outage probability and outage capacity of MRC based receivers. In addition, we
derive exact closed-form expressions for the average bit error rate of coherent
binary modulation schemes followed by an asymptotic analysis which provides
further insights into the effect of the system parameters on the overall
performance. Importantly, it is shown that the effect of multipath fading on
the system performance is more pronounced than that of shadowing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dual-Branch MRC Receivers under Spatial Interference Correlation and Nakagami Fading
Despite being ubiquitous in practice, the performance of maximal-ratio
combining (MRC) in the presence of interference is not well understood. Because
the interference received at each antenna originates from the same set of
interferers, but partially de-correlates over the fading channel, it possesses
a complex correlation structure. This work develops a realistic analytic model
that accurately accounts for the interference correlation using stochastic
geometry. Modeling interference by a Poisson shot noise process with
independent Nakagami fading, we derive the link success probability for
dual-branch interference-aware MRC. Using this result, we show that the common
assumption that all receive antennas experience equal interference power
underestimates the true performance, although this gap rapidly decays with
increasing the Nakagami parameter of the interfering links. In
contrast, ignoring interference correlation leads to a highly optimistic
performance estimate for MRC, especially for large . In the low
outage probability regime, our success probability expression can be
considerably simplified. Observations following from the analysis include: (i)
for small path loss exponents, MRC and minimum mean square error combining
exhibit similar performance, and (ii) the gains of MRC over selection combining
are smaller in the interference-limited case than in the well-studied
noise-limited case.Comment: to appear in IEEE Transactions on Communication
- …