In this article, we investigate the spectrum-sharing for a space information network comprised of a geostationary orbit (GEO) satellite and a pair of low earth orbit (LEO) satellites, where one spectrum-sensing LEO (SLEO) is used to sense the status of spectrum occupancy of the GEO, and one data-transmission LEO (DLEO) satellite is allowed to access the shared spectrum of the GEO with the aid of the SLEO. In order to improve the throughput of the DLEO satellite, a spectrum sharing framework has been conceived relying on two stages. Differing from the conventional spectrum-sharing scheme, the data-transmission LEO satellite has the ability to access the shared spectrum both in overlay mode and in underlay mode. In overlay mode, the DLEO can perform transmission at any required transmit power. By contrast, in underlay mode, a spectrum-sensing and power allocation aided spectrum-sharing (SPA-SS) scheme is proposed to guarantee that the maximal amount of interference is imposed on the GEO caused by the DLEO. To be specific, in the first stage, the SLEO is invoked for performing spectrum-sensing, where the time intervals of spectrum-sensing have been specifically optimized to alleviate the interference received at the GEO in the second stage. Moreover, an adaptive power allocation is designed to maximal the throughput of the DLEO in the second stage, whilst maintaining the maximal interference imposed on the GEO is lower than the tolerable interference temperature of the GEO. Numerical results show that the proposed SPA-SS scheme outperforms the traditional spectrum-sharing scheme in terms of not only the average throughput, but also of the time-utilization ratio. INDEX TERMSCognitive satellite network, spectrum coexistence, spectrum sensing, Hidden Markov model, sensing time interval. YUNFENG WANG received the B.E. degree in communication engineering from Shandong Normal University, Shandong, China, in 2009. He is currently pursuing the Ph.D. degree in satellite communication with the Satellite and Mobile Communication Section, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications.His research interests include spectrum sensing, cooperative communications, spectrum interference, and game theory.XIAOJIN DING (Member, IEEE) received the Ph.D. degree in information and communication engineering from the National Mobile Communi-
We investigate a distributed-satellite-clusters (DSC)-system-based spectrum sensing, to enhance the ability for sensing weak signals. However, the spectrum-sensing performance may be significantly decreased by the phase deviations among different satellite clusters, where the deviations may be caused by the movement and the perturbation of satellites. To eliminate such a decrement, we propose a cooperative spectrum-sensing scheme in the presence of phase deviations, where the deviations are alleviated by a special two-stage phase synchronization. Specifically, the phase compensation is first performed relying on broadcasting reference signals and the ephemeris, to address the challenges of the deviations caused by the movement. Then, a two-bit feedback algorithm, having a dynamic disturbance step size, is further adopted for controlling and mitigating the deviations caused by the perturbation. Additionally, we provide the closed-form expression of the correct detection probability of the proposed spectrum-sensing scheme, using the specially derived probability density function of the sum of the shadowed-Rician random variables with independently identical distribution. Simulation results show that the proposed scheme can achieve the best spectrum-sensing performance, comparing with the traditional energy detection, eigenvalue ratio test and the generalized likelihood ratio test.
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