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arxiv: 1802.06450 · v1 · pith:DXGYZAX3new · submitted 2018-02-18 · 💻 cs.IT · cs.NI· math.IT

Reducing Initial Cell-search Latency in mmWave Networks

classification 💻 cs.IT cs.NImath.IT
keywords cell-searchmmwavenetworksbeamforminglatencydenseexhaustivefailure
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Millimeter-wave (mmWave) networks rely on directional transmissions, in both control plane and data plane, to overcome severe path-loss. Nevertheless, the use of narrow beams complicates the initial cell-search procedure where we lack sufficient information for beamforming. In this paper, we investigate the feasibility of random beamforming for cell-search. We develop a stochastic geometry framework to analyze the performance in terms of failure probability and expected latency of cell-search. Meanwhile, we compare our results with the naive, but heavily used, exhaustive search scheme. Numerical results show that, for a given discovery failure probability, random beamforming can substantially reduce the latency of exhaustive search, especially in dense networks. Our work demonstrates that developing complex cell-discovery algorithms may be unnecessary in dense mmWave networks and thus shed new lights on mmWave system design.

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