8 research outputs found

    Efficient Optimal Joint Channel Estimation and Data Detection for Massive MIMO Systems

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    In this paper, we propose an efficient optimal joint channel estimation and data detection algorithm for massive MIMO wireless systems. Our algorithm is optimal in terms of the generalized likelihood ratio test (GLRT). For massive MIMO systems, we show that the expected complexity of our algorithm grows polynomially in the channel coherence time. Simulation results demonstrate significant performance gains of our algorithm compared with suboptimal non-coherent detection algorithms. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first algorithm which efficiently achieves GLRT-optimal non-coherent detections for massive MIMO systems with general constellations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Conferenc

    Optimized Markov Chain Monte Carlo for Signal Detection in MIMO Systems: An Analysis of the Stationary Distribution and Mixing Time

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    We introduce an optimized Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) technique for solving integer least-squares (ILS) problems, which include maximum likelihood (ML) detection in multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems. Two factors contribute to its speed of finding the optimal solution: the probability of encountering the optimal solution when the Markov chain has converged to the stationary distribution, and the mixing time of the MCMC detector. First, we compute the optimal ā€œtemperatureā€ parameter value, so that once the Markov chain has mixed to its stationary distribution, there is a polynomially small probability ( 1/poly(N), instead of exponentially small) of encountering the optimal solution, where N is the system dimension. This temperature is shown to be O(āˆš{SNR}/ln(N)), where SNR > 2ln(N) is the SNR. Second, we study the mixing time of the underlying Markov chain of the MCMC detector. We find that, the mixing time is closely related to whether there is a local minimum in the ILS problem's lattice structure. For some lattices without local minima, the mixing time is independent of SNR, and grows polynomially in N. Conventional wisdom proposed to set temperature as the noise standard deviation, but our results show that, under such a temperature, the mixing time grows unbounded with SNR if the lattice has local minima. Our results suggest that, very often the temperature should instead be scaling at least as Ī©(āˆš{SNR}). Simulation results show that the optimized MCMC detector efficiently achieves approximately ML detection in MIMO systems having a huge number of transmit and receive dimensions
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