On Single-User Interactive Beam Alignment in Millimeter Wave Systems: Impact of Feedback Delay
Abbas Khalili, Shahram Shahsavari, Mohammad A. Amir Khojastepour, and Elza Erkip

TL;DR
This paper studies beam alignment strategies in millimeter wave systems considering feedback delays, introducing d-unimodal codes to optimize beamwidth and improve alignment efficiency under practical delay conditions.
Contribution
It introduces d-unimodal codes and analyzes their properties to optimize beam alignment with feedback delays, providing a new theoretical framework and performance bounds.
Findings
Lower bound on achievable beamwidth with feedback delay
Potential reduction in beam alignment duration
Performance improvements over delay-agnostic methods
Abstract
Narrow beams are key to wireless communications in millimeter wave frequency bands. Beam alignment (BA) allows the base station (BS) to adjust the direction and width of the beam used for communication. During BA, the BS transmits a number of scanning beams covering different angular regions. The goal is to minimize the expected width of the uncertainty region (UR) that includes the angle of departure of the user. Conventionally, in interactive BA, it is assumed that the feedback corresponding to each scanning packet is received prior to transmission of the next one. However, in practice, the feedback delay could be larger because of propagation or system constraints. This paper investigates BA strategies that operate under arbitrary fixed feedback delays. This problem is analyzed through a source coding prospective where the feedback sequences are viewed as source codewords. It is…
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