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The Value of Staying Current when Beamforming

Publication ,  Journal Article
Wu, Y; Achtzehn, A; Petrova, M; Mahonen, P; Calderbank, R
July 29, 2010

Beamforming is a widely used method of provisioning high quality wireless channels that leads to high data rates and simple decoding structures. It requires feedback of Channel State Information (CSI) from receiver to transmitter, and the accuracy of this information is limited by rate constraints on the feedback channel and by delay. It is important to understand how the performance gains associated with beamforming depend on the accuracy or currency of the Channel State Information. This paper quantifies performance degradation caused by aging of CSI. It uses outage probability to measure the currency of CSI, and to discount the performance gains associated with ideal beamforming. Outage probability is a function of the beamforming algorithm and results are presented for Transmit Antenna Selection and other widely used methods. These results are translated into effective diversity orders for Multiple Input Single Output (MISO) and Multiuser Multiple Input Multiple Output (MIMO) systems.

Duke Scholars

Publication Date

July 29, 2010
 

Citation

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Wu, Y., Achtzehn, A., Petrova, M., Mahonen, P., & Calderbank, R. (2010). The Value of Staying Current when Beamforming.
Wu, Yiyue, Andreas Achtzehn, Marina Petrova, Petri Mahonen, and Robert Calderbank. “The Value of Staying Current when Beamforming,” July 29, 2010.
Wu Y, Achtzehn A, Petrova M, Mahonen P, Calderbank R. The Value of Staying Current when Beamforming. 2010 Jul 29;
Wu, Yiyue, et al. The Value of Staying Current when Beamforming. July 2010.
Wu Y, Achtzehn A, Petrova M, Mahonen P, Calderbank R. The Value of Staying Current when Beamforming. 2010 Jul 29;

Publication Date

July 29, 2010