Practical IMT and EESS Spectrum Sharing in the 7 to 8 GHz Band
Elliot Eichen, Arvind Aradhya, Oren Collaco

TL;DR
This paper presents a practical spectrum sharing system called RGSS that enables coexistence of Earth Observation Satellite measurements and 5G/6G networks in the 7 GHz band, ensuring minimal interference and high spectrum utilization.
Contribution
The paper introduces a Real Time Geofenced Spectrum Sharing system that allows efficient spectrum sharing between P-SST measurements and IMT networks in the 7 GHz band, with real-world proof-of-concept results.
Findings
RGSS prevents interference to P-SST measurements during spectrum sharing.
IMT networks can access over 99.9% of the shared spectrum without interference.
Paused access time is less than 0.1%, with mechanisms to mitigate impact.
Abstract
The 7.3 GHz (350 MHz bandwidth) Earth Observation Satellite (EOS) band, while not protected, is used for Passive Sea Surface Temperature (P-SST) measurements that provide important data for weather forecasts, coastal disaster prevention, climate modeling, and oceanographic research. The full 7 GHz band (7.125 to 8.4 GHz), which encompasses these EOS frequencies, is the largest contiguous block of potentially available mid-band spectrum and will play a significant role in meeting the anticipated demand for wireless services. A Real Time Geofenced Spectrum Sharing (RGSS) system is shown to be a practical and near term solution to spectrum sharing between P-SST measurements and 5G or 6G networks in the 7GHz band. RGSS enables IMT networks and EOS radiometers to share 350MHz of overlapping spectrum centered at 7.3 GHz. It prevents interference to P-SST measurements while simultaneously…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTelecommunications and Broadcasting Technologies
