Airy beams for near-field communications: Fundamentals, potentials, and limitations
Donatella Darsena, Francesco Verde, Marco Di Renzo, Vincenzo Galdi

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of Airy beams in near-field wireless communications, highlighting their unique properties, generation challenges, propagation behavior, and potential advantages over Gaussian beams in non-line-of-sight scenarios.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of Airy beams' fundamentals, challenges in their generation, and their propagation characteristics, especially in NLoS conditions, with theoretical and numerical comparisons to Gaussian beams.
Findings
Airy beams exhibit self-acceleration and diffraction-free propagation.
They can outperform Gaussian beams in certain NLoS channels.
Generation challenges include finite energy constraints and spatial truncation.
Abstract
In next-generation wireless networks, the combination of electrically large radiating apertures and high-frequency transmission extends the radiating near-field region around the transmitter. In this region, unlike in the far field, the wavefront is nonplanar, which provides additional degrees of freedom to shape and steer the transmitted beam in a desired manner. In this paper, we focus on Airy beams, which may exhibit several highly desirable properties in the near-field region. Ideally, these beams follow self-accelerating (curved) trajectories, demonstrate resilience to perturbations through self-healing, and maintain a consistent intensity profile across all planes perpendicular to the propagation direction, making them effectively diffraction-free. Specifically, we first present the underlying principles of self-accelerating beams radiated by continuous aperture field…
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