3,784 research outputs found
Transmit Signal and Bandwidth Optimization in Multiple-Antenna Relay Channels
Transmit signal and bandwidth optimization is considered in multiple-antenna
relay channels. Assuming all terminals have channel state information, the
cut-set capacity upper bound and decode-and-forward rate under full-duplex
relaying are evaluated by formulating them as convex optimization problems. For
half-duplex relays, bandwidth allocation and transmit signals are optimized
jointly. Moreover, achievable rates based on the compress-and-forward
transmission strategy are presented using rate-distortion and Wyner-Ziv
compression schemes. It is observed that when the relay is close to the source,
decode-and-forward is almost optimal, whereas compress-and-forward achieves
good performance when the relay is close to the destination.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
Principles of Physical Layer Security in Multiuser Wireless Networks: A Survey
This paper provides a comprehensive review of the domain of physical layer
security in multiuser wireless networks. The essential premise of
physical-layer security is to enable the exchange of confidential messages over
a wireless medium in the presence of unauthorized eavesdroppers without relying
on higher-layer encryption. This can be achieved primarily in two ways: without
the need for a secret key by intelligently designing transmit coding
strategies, or by exploiting the wireless communication medium to develop
secret keys over public channels. The survey begins with an overview of the
foundations dating back to the pioneering work of Shannon and Wyner on
information-theoretic security. We then describe the evolution of secure
transmission strategies from point-to-point channels to multiple-antenna
systems, followed by generalizations to multiuser broadcast, multiple-access,
interference, and relay networks. Secret-key generation and establishment
protocols based on physical layer mechanisms are subsequently covered.
Approaches for secrecy based on channel coding design are then examined, along
with a description of inter-disciplinary approaches based on game theory and
stochastic geometry. The associated problem of physical-layer message
authentication is also introduced briefly. The survey concludes with
observations on potential research directions in this area.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, 303 refs. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1303.1609 by other authors. IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials,
201
Multi-Antenna Cooperative Wireless Systems: A Diversity-Multiplexing Tradeoff Perspective
We consider a general multiple antenna network with multiple sources,
multiple destinations and multiple relays in terms of the
diversity-multiplexing tradeoff (DMT). We examine several subcases of this most
general problem taking into account the processing capability of the relays
(half-duplex or full-duplex), and the network geometry (clustered or
non-clustered). We first study the multiple antenna relay channel with a
full-duplex relay to understand the effect of increased degrees of freedom in
the direct link. We find DMT upper bounds and investigate the achievable
performance of decode-and-forward (DF), and compress-and-forward (CF)
protocols. Our results suggest that while DF is DMT optimal when all terminals
have one antenna each, it may not maintain its good performance when the
degrees of freedom in the direct link is increased, whereas CF continues to
perform optimally. We also study the multiple antenna relay channel with a
half-duplex relay. We show that the half-duplex DMT behavior can significantly
be different from the full-duplex case. We find that CF is DMT optimal for
half-duplex relaying as well, and is the first protocol known to achieve the
half-duplex relay DMT. We next study the multiple-access relay channel (MARC)
DMT. Finally, we investigate a system with a single source-destination pair and
multiple relays, each node with a single antenna, and show that even under the
idealistic assumption of full-duplex relays and a clustered network, this
virtual multi-input multi-output (MIMO) system can never fully mimic a real
MIMO DMT. For cooperative systems with multiple sources and multiple
destinations the same limitation remains to be in effect.Comment: version 1: 58 pages, 15 figures, Submitted to IEEE Transactions on
Information Theory, version 2: Final version, to appear IEEE IT, title
changed, extra figures adde
Compute-and-Forward: Harnessing Interference through Structured Codes
Interference is usually viewed as an obstacle to communication in wireless
networks. This paper proposes a new strategy, compute-and-forward, that
exploits interference to obtain significantly higher rates between users in a
network. The key idea is that relays should decode linear functions of
transmitted messages according to their observed channel coefficients rather
than ignoring the interference as noise. After decoding these linear equations,
the relays simply send them towards the destinations, which given enough
equations, can recover their desired messages. The underlying codes are based
on nested lattices whose algebraic structure ensures that integer combinations
of codewords can be decoded reliably. Encoders map messages from a finite field
to a lattice and decoders recover equations of lattice points which are then
mapped back to equations over the finite field. This scheme is applicable even
if the transmitters lack channel state information.Comment: IEEE Trans. Info Theory, to appear. 23 pages, 13 figure
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