Cloud-Enabled High-Altitude Platform Systems: Challenges and Opportunities
Khaleel Mershad, Hayssam Dahrouj, Hadi Sarieddeen, Basem Shihada,, Tareq Al-Naffouri, and Mohamed-Slim Alouini

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of cloud-enabled high-altitude platform systems (HAPS) as flying data centers for next-generation wireless networks, highlighting opportunities, services, and challenges in integrating HAPS with cloud computing for diverse applications.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of cloud-enabled HAPS as flying data centers, explores various services they can provide, and discusses key challenges and open issues for practical implementation.
Findings
HAPS can serve as flying data centers enhancing service quality and range.
Various cloud services can be offloaded to HAPS for IoT, satellite, and vehicular networks.
Challenges include energy, processing power, security, and mobility management.
Abstract
Augmenting ground-level communications with flying networks, such as the high-altitude platform system (HAPS), is among the major innovative initiatives of the next generation of wireless systems (6G). Given HAPS quasi-static positioning at the stratosphere, HAPS-to-ground and HAPS-to-air connectivity frameworks are expected to be prolific in terms of data acquisition and computing, especially given the mild weather and quasi-constant wind speed characteristics of the stratospheric layer. This paper explores the opportunities stemming from the realization of cloud-enabled HAPS in the context of telecommunications applications and services. The paper first advocates for the potential physical advantages of deploying HAPS as flying data-centers, also known as super-macro base stations. The paper then describes various cloud services that can be offered from the HAPS and the merits that…
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