Title :
On the Resilience of Wireless Multiuser Networks to Passive and Active Eavesdroppers
Author :
Chorti, Arsenia ; Perlaza, Samir M. ; Zhu Han ; Poor, H. Vincent
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract :
Physical layer security can provide alternative means for securing the exchange of confidential messages in wireless applications. In this paper, the resilience of wireless multiuser networks to passive (interception of the broadcast channel) and active (interception of the broadcast channel and false feedback) eavesdroppers is investigated under Rayleigh fading conditions. Stochastic characterizations of the secrecy capacity (SC) are obtained in scenarios involving a base station and several destinations. The expected values and variances of the SC along with the probabilities of secrecy outages are evaluated in the following cases: (i) in the presence of passive eavesdroppers without any side information; (ii) in the presence of passive eavesdroppers with side information about the number of eavesdroppers; and (iii) in the presence of a single active eavesdropper with side information about the behavior of the eavesdropper. This investigation demonstrates that substantial secrecy rates are attainable on average in the presence of passive eavesdroppers as long as minimal side information is available. On the other hand, it is further found that active eavesdroppers can potentially compromise such networks unless statistical inference is employed to restrict their ability to attack. Interestingly, in the high signal to noise ratio regime, multiuser networks become insensitive to the activeness or passiveness of the attack.
Keywords :
Rayleigh channels; broadcast channels; radio networks; stochastic processes; telecommunication security; Rayleigh fading condition; SC; base station; broadcast channel; false feedback eavesdroppers; high signal-to-noise ratio; message exchange security; passive eavesdropper; physical layer security; secrecy capacity; side information; single active eavesdropper; statistical inference; stochastic characterization; substantial secrecy rates; wireless applications; wireless multiuser networks; Array signal processing; Covariance matrices; Optimization; Resource management; Signal to noise ratio; Transmitters; Secrecy capacity; multiple eavesdroppers; multiuser diversity; outage probability; physical layer security; secrecy rate; slow fading and side information;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
DOI :
10.1109/JSAC.2013.130917