Author :
Monemi, Mehdi ; Rasti, Mehdi ; Hossain, Ekram
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Neyriz Branch, Islamic Azad University, Iran
Abstract :
In an underlay cognitive radio network (CRN), in order to guarantee protection of primary users (PUs) (i.e., all PUs achieve their target signal-to-interference-plus-noise ratios [SINRs]), the interference caused by all secondary users (SUs) to the primary receiving-points should be controlled. To do so, the feasible cognitive interference region (FCIR), i.e., the region for allowable values of interference at all of the primary receiving-points, which guarantee protecting the PUs, needs to be formally characterized. In the state-of-the-art interference management schemes for underlay CRNs, it is considered that all PUs are protected if the cognitive interference for each primary receiving-point is lower than a maximum threshold, the so called interference temperature limit (ITL) for the corresponding receiving-point. This is assumed to be fixed and independent of ITL values for other primary receiving-points. This corresponds to a box-like FCIR, which is not correct. In this paper, we analytically obtain the FCIR and show that, the FCIR is a polyhedron (i.e., the maximum feasible cognitive interference threshold for each primary receiving-point is not constant, and it depends on that for other primary receiving-points). Therefore, in practical interference management algorithms, it is not proper to consider a constant and independent ITL value for each of the primary receiving-points. This finding would significantly affect the design of practical interference management schemes for CRNs.