401 research outputs found

    Compressive Identification of Active OFDM Subcarriers in Presence of Timing Offset

    Full text link
    In this paper we study the problem of identifying active subcarriers in an OFDM signal from compressive measurements sampled at sub-Nyquist rate. The problem is of importance in Cognitive Radio systems when secondary users (SUs) are looking for available spectrum opportunities to communicate over them while sensing at Nyquist rate sampling can be costly or even impractical in case of very wide bandwidth. We first study the effect of timing offset and derive the necessary and sufficient conditions for signal recovery in the oracle-assisted case when the true active sub-carriers are assumed known. Then we propose an Orthogonal Matching Pursuit (OMP)-based joint sparse recovery method for identifying active subcarriers when the timing offset is known. Finally we extend the problem to the case of unknown timing offset and develop a joint dictionary learning and sparse approximation algorithm, where in the dictionary learning phase the timing offset is estimated and in the sparse approximation phase active subcarriers are identified. The obtained results demonstrate that active subcarrier identification can be carried out reliably, by using the developed framework.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM) 201

    Multiband Spectrum Access: Great Promises for Future Cognitive Radio Networks

    Full text link
    Cognitive radio has been widely considered as one of the prominent solutions to tackle the spectrum scarcity. While the majority of existing research has focused on single-band cognitive radio, multiband cognitive radio represents great promises towards implementing efficient cognitive networks compared to single-based networks. Multiband cognitive radio networks (MB-CRNs) are expected to significantly enhance the network's throughput and provide better channel maintenance by reducing handoff frequency. Nevertheless, the wideband front-end and the multiband spectrum access impose a number of challenges yet to overcome. This paper provides an in-depth analysis on the recent advancements in multiband spectrum sensing techniques, their limitations, and possible future directions to improve them. We study cooperative communications for MB-CRNs to tackle a fundamental limit on diversity and sampling. We also investigate several limits and tradeoffs of various design parameters for MB-CRNs. In addition, we explore the key MB-CRNs performance metrics that differ from the conventional metrics used for single-band based networks.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures; published in the Proceedings of the IEEE Journal, Special Issue on Future Radio Spectrum Access, March 201

    Cooperative Wideband Spectrum Sensing Based on Joint Sparsity

    Get PDF
    COOPERATIVE WIDEBAND SPECTRUM SENSING BASED ON JOINT SPARSITY By Ghazaleh Jowkar, Master of Science A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science at Virginia Commonwealth University Virginia Commonwealth University 2017 Major Director: Dr. Ruixin Niu, Associate Professor of Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering In this thesis, the problem of wideband spectrum sensing in cognitive radio (CR) networks using sub-Nyquist sampling and sparse signal processing techniques is investigated. To mitigate multi-path fading, it is assumed that a group of spatially dispersed SUs collaborate for wideband spectrum sensing, to determine whether or not a channel is occupied by a primary user (PU). Due to the underutilization of the spectrum by the PUs, the spectrum matrix has only a small number of non-zero rows. In existing state-of-the-art approaches, the spectrum sensing problem was solved using the low-rank matrix completion technique involving matrix nuclear-norm minimization. Motivated by the fact that the spectrum matrix is not only low-rank, but also sparse, a spectrum sensing approach is proposed based on minimizing a mixed-norm of the spectrum matrix instead of low-rank matrix completion to promote the joint sparsity among the column vectors of the spectrum matrix. Simulation results are obtained, which demonstrate that the proposed mixed-norm minimization approach outperforms the low-rank matrix completion based approach, in terms of the PU detection performance. Further we used mixed-norm minimization model in multi time frame detection. Simulation results shows that increasing the number of time frames will increase the detection performance, however, by increasing the number of time frames after a number of times the performance decrease dramatically

    A Cognitive Radio Compressive Sensing Framework

    Get PDF
    With the proliferation of wireless devices and services, allied with further significant predicted growth, there is an ever increasing demand for higher transmission rates. This is especially challenging given the limited availability of radio spectrum, and is further exacerbated by a rigid licensing regulatory regime. Spectrum however, is largely underutilized and this has prompted regulators to promote the concept of opportunistic spectrum access. This allows unlicensed secondary users to use bands which are licensed to primary users, but are currently unoccupied, so leading to more efficient spectrum utilization. A potentially attractive solution to this spectrum underutilisation problem is cognitive radio (CR) technology, which enables the identification and usage of vacant bands by continuously sensing the radio environment, though CR enforces stringent timing requirements and high sampling rates. Compressive sensing (CS) has emerged as a novel sampling paradigm, which provides the theoretical basis to resolve some of these issues, especially for signals exhibiting sparsity in some domain. For CR-related signals however, existing CS architectures such as the random demodulator and compressive multiplexer have limitations in regard to the signal types used, spectrum estimation methods applied, spectral band classification and a dependence on Fourier domain based sparsity. This thesis presents a new generic CS framework which addresses these issues by specifically embracing three original scientific contributions: i) seamless embedding of the concept of precolouring into existing CS architectures to enhance signal sparsity for CR-related digital modulation schemes; ii) integration of the multitaper spectral estimator to improve sparsity in CR narrowband modulation schemes; and iii) exploiting sparsity in an alternative, non-Fourier (Walsh-Hadamard) domain to expand the applicable CR-related modulation schemes. Critical analysis reveals the new CS framework provides a consistently superior and robust solution for the recovery of an extensive set of currently employed CR-type signals encountered in wireless communication standards. Significantly, the generic and portable nature of the framework affords the opportunity for further extensions into other CS architectures and sparsity domains
    • …
    corecore