How Many Pinching Antennas Are Enough?
Dimitrios Tyrovolas, Sotiris A. Tegos, Yue Xiao, Panagiotis D. Diamantoulakis, Sotiris Ioannidis, Christos K. Liaskos, George K. Karagiannidis, Stylianos D. Asimonis

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how many fixed-position pinching antennas are needed in programmable wireless environments to approximate ideal continuous control, providing analytical tools and insights for practical system design.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical framework for two-state pinching-antenna systems considering discrete positions, and quantifies the performance gap with a new discretization efficiency metric.
Findings
Performance approaches continuous control with few antennas
Analytical expressions for outage probability and data rate
Guidelines for optimal number of PAs in PASs
Abstract
Programmable wireless environments (PWEs) have emerged as a key paradigm for next-generation communication networks, aiming to transform wireless propagation from an uncontrollable phenomenon into a reconfigurable process that can adapt to diverse service requirements. In this framework, pinching-antenna systems (PASs) have recently been proposed as a promising enabling technology, as they allow the radiation location and effective propagation distance to be adjusted by selectively exciting radiating points along a dielectric waveguide. However, most existing studies on PASs rely on the idealized assumption that pinching-antenna (PA) positions can be continuously adjusted along the waveguide, while realistically only a finite set of pinching locations is available. Motivated by this, this paper analyzes the performance of two-state PASs, where the PA positions are fixed and only their…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MIMO Systems Optimization · Mobile Ad Hoc Networks · Millimeter-Wave Propagation and Modeling
