DocumentCode
1891669
Title
Dynamic spatial spectrum access with opportunistic orthogonalization
Author
Shen, Cong ; Fitz, Michael P.
Author_Institution
Electr. Eng. Dept., Univ. of California, Los Angeles, CA
fYear
2009
fDate
18-20 March 2009
Firstpage
600
Lastpage
605
Abstract
Opportunistic spatial orthogonalization (OSO) is a new cognitive radio scheme that allows the existence of secondary users and hence increases the system throughput, even if the primary user occupies all the frequency bands all the time. Notably, this throughput advantage is obtained without sacrificing the performance of the primary user, if the interference margin is carefully chosen. The key idea is to exploit the spatial dimensions to orthogonalize users and hence minimize interference. However, unlike the time and frequency dimensions, there is no universal basis for the set of all multi-dimensional spatial channels, which motivated the development of OSO. On one hand, OSO can be viewed as a multi-user diversity scheme that exploits the channel randomness and independence. On the other hand, OSO can be interpreted as an opportunistic interference alignment scheme, where the interference from multiple secondary users is opportunistically aligned at the direction that is orthogonal to the primary user´s signal space. Throughput advantages are studied both analytically and numerically.
Keywords
cognitive radio; radio spectrum management; radiofrequency interference; cognitive radio; dynamic spatial spectrum access; interference margin; multidimensional spatial channel; multiuser diversity scheme; opportunistic spatial orthogonalization; system throughput; Cellular networks; Channel capacity; Chromium; Cognitive radio; Frequency domain analysis; Interference channels; Multiaccess communication; Signal processing; Throughput; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Sciences and Systems, 2009. CISS 2009. 43rd Annual Conference on
Conference_Location
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2733-8
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-2734-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CISS.2009.5054789
Filename
5054789
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