Joint Radiation Power, Antenna Position, and Beamforming Optimization for Pinching-Antenna Systems with Motion Power Consumption
Yiming Xu, Dongfang Xu, Xianghao Yu, Shenghui Song, Zhiguo Ding, and Robert Schober

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel PASS system that jointly optimizes antenna placement, radiation power, and beamforming, considering motion power consumption, to enhance wireless network performance.
Contribution
It is the first to incorporate radiation power optimization and antenna movement into PASS design, addressing physical constraints and system efficiency.
Findings
Optimized PASS reduces power consumption while meeting QoS.
Incorporating antenna movement improves system performance.
PASS outperforms conventional MIMO in large-scale path loss mitigation.
Abstract
Pinching-antenna systems (PASS) have been recently proposed to improve the performance of wireless networks by reconfiguring both the large-scale and small-scale channel conditions. However, existing studies ignore the physical constraints of antenna placement and assume fixed antenna radiation power. To fill this research gap, this paper investigates the design of PASS taking into account the motion power consumption of pinching-antennas (PAs) and the impact of adjustable antenna radiation power. To that end, we minimize the average power consumption for a given quality-of-service (QoS) requirement, by jointly optimizing the antenna positions, antenna radiation power ratios, and transmit beamforming. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first work to consider radiation power optimization in PASS, which provides an additional degree of freedom (DoF) for system design. The…
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