DocumentCode :
1355541
Title :
Secure Transmission With Multiple Antennas—Part II: The MIMOME Wiretap Channel
Author :
Khisti, Ashish ; Wornell, Gregory W.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume :
56
Issue :
11
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
5515
Lastpage :
5532
Abstract :
The capacity of the Gaussian wiretap channel model is analyzed when there are multiple antennas at the sender, intended receiver and eavesdropper. The associated channel matrices are fixed and known to all the terminals. A computable characterization of the secrecy capacity is established as the saddle point solution to a minimax problem. The converse is based on a Sato-type argument used in other broadcast settings, and the coding theorem is based on Gaussian wiretap codebooks. At high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), the secrecy capacity is shown to be attained by simultaneously diagonalizing the channel matrices via the generalized singular value decomposition, and independently coding across the resulting parallel channels. The associated capacity is expressed in terms of the corresponding generalized singular values. It is shown that a semi-blind "masked" multi-input multi-output (MIMO) transmission strategy that sends information along directions in which there is gain to the intended receiver, and synthetic noise along directions in which there is not, can be arbitrarily far from capacity in this regime. Necessary and sufficient conditions for the secrecy capacity to be zero are provided, which simplify in the limit of many antennas when the entries of the channel matrices are independent and identically distributed. The resulting scaling laws establish that to prevent secure communication, the eavesdropper needs three times as many antennas as the sender and intended receiver have jointly, and that the optimum division of antennas between sender and intended receiver is in the ratio of 2:1.
Keywords :
MIMO communication; antenna arrays; broadcast channels; channel coding; cryptography; minimax techniques; singular value decomposition; telecommunication security; Gaussian wiretap channel model; Gaussian wiretap codebooks; MIMOME wiretap channel; SNR; Sato-type argument; associated channel matrices; broadcast channel; coding theorem; cryptography; generalized singular value decomposition; minimax problem; multiinput multioutput transmission strategy; multiple antennas; parallel channels; receiver; saddle point solution; semiblind masked strategy; signal-to-noise ratio; synthetic noise; MIMO; Noise; Receiving antennas; Transmitting antennas; Upper bound; Broadcast channel; MIMO wiretap channel; cryptography; multiple antennas; secrecy capacity;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9448
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2010.2068852
Filename :
5605343
Link To Document :
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