English

The Dirty MIMO Multiple-Access Channel

Information Theory 2017-06-20 v4 math.IT

Abstract

In the scalar dirty multiple-access channel, in addition to Gaussian noise, two additive interference signals are present, each known non-causally to a single transmitter. It was shown by Philosof et al. that for strong interferences, an i.i.d. ensemble of codes does not achieve the capacity region. Rather, a structured-codes approach was presented, that was shown to be optimal in the limit of high signal-to-noise ratios, where the sum-capacity is dictated by the minimal ("bottleneck") channel gain. In this paper, we consider the multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) variant of this setting. In order to incorporate structured codes in this case, one can utilize matrix decompositions that transform the channel into effective parallel scalar dirty multiple-access channels. This approach however suffers from a "bottleneck" effect for each effective scalar channel and therefore the achievable rates strongly depend on the chosen decomposition. It is shown that a recently proposed decomposition, where the diagonals of the effective channel matrices are equal up to a scaling factor, is optimal at high signal-to-noise ratios, under an equal rank assumption. This approach is then extended to any number of transmitters. Finally, an application to physical-layer network coding for the MIMO two-way relay channel is presented.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1510.08018,
  title  = {The Dirty MIMO Multiple-Access Channel},
  author = {Anatoly Khina and Yuval Kochman and Uri Erez},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1510.08018},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

To appear, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory

R2 v1 2026-06-22T11:30:20.018Z