In this paper, we investigate potential synergies of non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) and beam hopping (BH) for multi-beam satellite systems. The coexistence of BH and NOMA provides time-power-domain flexibilities in mitigating a practical mismatch effect between offered capacity and requested traffic per beam. We formulate the joint BH scheduling and NOMA-based power allocation problem as mixed-integer nonconvex programming. We reveal the exponential-conic structure for the original problem, and reformulate the problem to the format of mixed-integer conic programming (MICP), where the optimum can be obtained by exponential-complexity algorithms. A greedy scheme is proposed to solve the problem on a timeslotby-timeslot basis with polynomial-time complexity. Numerical results show the effectiveness of the proposed efficient suboptimal algorithm in reducing the matching error by 62.57% in average over the OMA scheme and achieving a good trade-off between computational complexity and performance compared to the optimal solution.
In a multi-beam satellite communication system, traffic requests are typically asymmetric across beams and highly heterogeneous among terminals. In practical operations, it is important to achieve a good match between the offered and requested traffic, i.e., to improve the performance of Offered Capacity to requested Traffic Ratio (OCTR). Due to satellites' payload constraints and limited flexibilities, it is a challenging task for resource optimization. In this paper, we tackle this issue by formulating a maxmin resource allocation problem, taking fairness into account such that the lowest OCTR can be maximized. To exploit the potential synergies, we introduce Non-Orthogonal Multiple Access (NOMA) to enable aggressive frequency reuse and mitigate intra-beam interference. Although NOMA has proven its capabilities in improving throughput and fairness in 5G terrestrial networks, for multi-beam satellite systems it is unclear if NOMA can help to enhance the OCTR performance, and hence is worth quantifying how much gain it can bring. To solve the problem, we design a suboptimal algorithm to firstly decompose the original problem into multiple convex subproblems by fixing power allocation for each beam, and secondly adjust beam power to improve the minimum OCTR in iterations. Numerical results show the convergence of the proposed algorithm and the superiority of the proposed NOMA scheme in max-min OCTR.
Abstract-A novel technique to obtain optimum blind spatial processing for frequency diversity spread spectrum (FDSS) communication systems is introduced. The sufficient statistics for a linear combiner, which prove ineffective due to the interferers frequency characteristics, are modified to yield improved detection under partial jamming in the spectral domain. Robustness to partial time jamming is achieved by extending the notion of replicas over the frequency axis to a repetition over the time variable. Analysis and simulations are provided, showing the advantages of using FDSS with spatial diversity to combat the interference when it is confined to a narrow frequency band or short time interval relative to the desired signal extent in either domain.
For single-frequency network (SFN) transmission, the echoes coming from different transmitters are superimposed at the reception, giving rise to a frequency selective channel. Although multicarrier modulations lower the dispersion, the demodulated signal is sensitive to be degraded by inter-symbol interference (ISI) and inter-carrier interference (ICI). In view of this, we use channel coding in conjunction either with filter bank multicarrier (FBMC) modulation or with orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM). To deal with the loss of orthogonality, we have devised an interference-aware receiver that carries out a soft detection under the assumption that the residual interference plus noise (IN) term is Gaussian-distributed. To keep the complexity low, we propose to estimate the variance of the IN term by resorting to data-aided algorithms. Experimental results show that regardless of the method, FBMC provides a slightly better performance in terms of coded bit error rate than OFDM, while the spectral efficiency is increased when FBMC is considered.
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