Title :
Secrecy Capacity Region of a Multiple-Antenna Gaussian Broadcast Channel With Confidential Messages
Author :
Liu, Ruoheng ; Poor, H. Vincent
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ
fDate :
3/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Wireless communication is particularly susceptible to eavesdropping due to its broadcast nature. Security and privacy systems have become critical for wireless providers and enterprise networks. This paper considers the problem of secret communication over the Gaussian broadcast channel, where a multiple-antenna transmitter wishes to send independent confidential messages to two users with information-theoretic secrecy. That is, each user would like to obtain its own confidential message in a reliable and safe manner. This communication model is referred to as the multiple-antenna Gaussian broadcast channel with confidential messages (MGBC-CM). Under this communication scenario, a secret dirty-paper coding scheme and the corresponding achievable secrecy rate region are first developed based on Gaussian codebooks. Next, a computable Sato-type outer bound on the secrecy capacity region is provided for the MGBC-CM. Furthermore, the Sato-type outer bound proves to be consistent with the boundary of the secret dirty-paper coding achievable rate region, and hence, the secrecy capacity region of the MGBC-CM is established. Finally, two numerical examples demonstrate that both users can achieve positive rates simultaneously under the information-theoretic secrecy requirement.
Keywords :
Gaussian channels; antenna arrays; broadcast channels; channel capacity; channel coding; data privacy; radio networks; telecommunication security; wireless channels; computable Sato-type outer bound; confidential message; eavesdropping; information-theory; multiple-antenna Gaussian broadcast channel; privacy system; secrecy capacity region; secrecy rate region; secret communication; secret dirty-paper coding scheme; wireless communication; Broadcasting; Communication system security; Degradation; Information security; Information theory; Privacy; Telecommunication network reliability; Transmitters; Wireless communication; Wireless networks; Broadcast channels; information-theoretic secrecy; multiple antennas; secret communication;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2008.2011448