Modeling and Mitigation of 7.125-7.40 GHz Terrestrial Network RFI on the Passive Earth Exploration Satellite Service in 6.725-7.125 GHz Band
Md Toufiqur Rahman, Hariharan Venkat, Chung-Tse Michael Wu, Ivan Seskar, Narayan B. Mandayam (Wireless Information Network Lab (WINLAB), Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the impact of terrestrial network interference on passive Earth Exploration Satellite Service sensors in a specific GHz band, proposing mitigation strategies and guard band requirements for future deployments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive RFI analysis for 6G terrestrial networks in the 7.125-7.4 GHz band, including mitigation techniques and guard band sizing over a 10-year deployment horizon.
Findings
A 100 Mbps increase in user rate raises RFI by 2.45 dB at sensors.
In 2030, no significant RFI for user rates up to 500 Mbps with 25 MHz guard band.
By 2040, RFI exceeds thresholds unless guard band is increased to 35 MHz or data rates are reduced.
Abstract
The 7.125-7.4 GHz band is attractive for next generation Terrestrial Network (TN) deployments owing to the large bandwidths available and favorable propagation characteristics. Furthermore, recent U.S. Presidential actions have cleared the usage of this band for 6G by stipulating relocation of federal incumbents that share this band. However, this deployment can only be successful if we can also guarantee coexistence of these networks with existing incumbents operating in adjacent bands. This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of the Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) caused by the proposed TNs in the 7.125-7.4 GHz band at passive Earth Exploration Satellite Service (EESS) sensors that operate in the adjacent 6.725-7.125 GHz band. Using TN base stations (BSs) equipped with filtennas (filtering antennas) as well as transmit precoders for RFI mitigation, we carry out an RFI analysis…
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