Authors
Jeffrey G Andrews, Radha Krishna Ganti, Martin Haenggi, Nihar Jindal, Steven Weber
Publication date
2010/11/4
Journal
IEEE Communications Magazine
Volume
48
Issue
11
Pages
156-163
Publisher
IEEE
Description
The performance of wireless networks depends critically on their spatial configuration, because received signal power and interference depend critically on the distances between numerous transmitters and receivers. This is particularly true in emerging network paradigms that may include femtocells, hotspots, relays, white space harvesters, and meshing approaches, which are often overlaid with traditional cellular networks. These heterogeneous approaches to providing high-capacity network access are characterized by randomly located nodes, irregularly deployed infrastructure, and uncertain spatial configurations due to factors like mobility and unplanned user-installed access points. This major shift is just beginning, and it requires new design approaches that are robust to spatial randomness, just as wireless links have long been designed to be robust to fading. The objective of this article is to illustrate the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JG Andrews, RK Ganti, M Haenggi, N Jindal, S Weber - IEEE Communications Magazine, 2010