Achievable Rates for a Distributed Antenna System with No Channel State Information at the Central Processor
Yi Song, Hao Xu, Kai Wan, Kai-Kit Wong, Giuseppe Caire, Shlomo Shamai (Shitz)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the achievable data rates in a distributed antenna system with no channel state information at the central processor, focusing on the impact of limited fronthaul capacity and unknown channel conditions.
Contribution
It provides an analysis of the ergodic achievable rate for a relay network with unknown channel state at the central processor, considering practical constraints like limited fronthaul capacity.
Findings
Derived the ergodic achievable rate under no CSIT conditions.
Analyzed the impact of fronthaul capacity limitations.
Provided insights into system performance with unknown channel states.
Abstract
A recent trend in wireless communications considers the migration of traditional monolithic base stations to the so-called disaggregated architecture, where radio units (RUs) implement only the low-level physical layer functionalities such as demodulation, and A/D conversion, while the high-level physical layer, such as channel decoding, is implemented as software-defined functions running on general-purpose hardware in some remote central processing unit (CP). The corresponding information theoretic model for the uplink (from the wireless users to the CP) is a multiaccess-relay channel with primitive oblivious relays. The relays (RUs) are oblivious, as they are agnostic of the users codebooks, and primitive, since the fronthaul links (from RUs to CP) are error-free with limited capacity. This class of networks has been intensely studied in the information theoretic literature, where…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCooperative Communication and Network Coding · Advanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Wireless Communication Security Techniques
