Multi-User MIMO with Rotatable Antennas and IRS: Joint Antenna Boresight and IRS Orientation Design
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 02:50 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Coordinating BS antenna boresights and IRS panel orientation raises sum-rate in multi-user MIMO systems.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In the single-user far-field regime the product of the BS-antenna rotation gain and the IRS-panel rotation gain is multiplicatively separable, whereas the factors become coupled once near-field effects appear. For the general multi-user case the authors develop an alternating optimization algorithm that updates the receive beamformer in closed form, solves the IRS phase-shift subproblem via an FP-assisted Riemannian conjugate gradient method, and refines the boresights and panel orientation by projected gradient ascent. The resulting coordinated rotation design produces substantial sum-rate improvements over fixed-orientation and single-rotation benchmarks.
What carries the argument
The dual-rotation gain arising from the product of BS antenna boresight adjustment and IRS panel orientation adjustment.
If this is right
- The alternating optimization yields measurable sum-rate gains over fixed-orientation and single-rotation baselines.
- The far-field separability of the dual-rotation gain simplifies analysis and design when users are distant.
- Near-field coupling between the two rotations must be handled directly once users enter the near field.
- Deployment of the IRS close to the BS reduces the impact of cascaded path loss when orientations are jointly tuned.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same rotation variables could be added to other reconfigurable-surface or movable-antenna architectures without changing the alternating-optimization skeleton.
- Hardware prototypes that physically rotate both the antenna array and the IRS panel would test whether the simulated gains survive mutual coupling and mechanical constraints.
- If the IRS must be placed farther from the BS, the separability result no longer holds and a joint near-field model becomes necessary.
Load-bearing premise
The IRS sits near the BS while all user links remain in the far field so that the dual-rotation gain factors into independent multiplicative terms.
What would settle it
A simulation or measurement in which the jointly optimized rotations produce no higher sum-rate than fixed orientations or single-rotation designs would falsify the claimed gains.
Figures
read the original abstract
In this paper, we investigate an intelligent reflecting surface (IRS)-assisted multi-user system, where the base station (BS) employs rotatable antennas (RAs) and the IRS can adjust the panel orientation.To alleviate the severe multiplicative path loss of the cascaded channel, the IRS is deployed near the BS, while the user-BS and user-IRS links remain in the far field. We formulate a sum-rate maximization problem by jointly optimizing the receive beamforming, IRS phase shifts, BS antenna boresights, and IRS panel orientation. To tackle the resulting highly coupled and non-convex problem, we first study a single-user case to reveal the structure of the dual-rotation gain, which is shown to be multiplicatively separable in the far field but coupled in the near field. For the general multi-user case, we develop an alternating optimization algorithm, where the receive beamforming is updated in closed form, the IRS phase shifts are optimized by an FP-assisted Riemannian conjugate gradient method, and the BS antenna boresights and IRS panel orientation are updated via projected gradient methods. Simulation results demonstrate the significant sum-rate gains achieved by the proposed coordinated rotation design over fixed-orientation and single-rotation benchmark schemes, and provide useful insights into near-field dual-rotation design.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript investigates an IRS-assisted multi-user MIMO system in which the BS uses rotatable antennas and the IRS panel orientation is adjustable. The IRS is placed near the BS with user-BS and user-IRS links kept in the far field. A single-user analysis establishes that the dual-rotation gain is multiplicatively separable under far-field conditions (but coupled in the near field). For the multi-user sum-rate maximization problem, an alternating optimization algorithm is proposed that updates receive beamforming in closed form, IRS phase shifts via an FP-assisted Riemannian conjugate gradient method, and the two orientation variables via projected gradient ascent. Simulations are used to claim significant sum-rate gains relative to fixed-orientation and single-rotation baselines, together with insights for near-field dual-rotation design.
Significance. If the reported gains are reproducible and the far-field assumption holds uniformly in the simulated geometries, the work supplies a concrete algorithmic framework and a separability insight that could guide practical orientation control in IRS deployments aimed at mitigating cascaded path loss. The combination of closed-form subproblem solutions with manifold optimization is a standard yet cleanly executed approach for this class of problems.
major comments (2)
- [Single-user analysis and multi-user algorithm description] The single-user far-field separability result is invoked to motivate the coordinated-rotation design, yet the multi-user AO algorithm is applied directly to the simulated geometries without an explicit check that every user-BS and user-IRS link satisfies the far-field condition used in the separability derivation. Any deviation would invalidate the structural insight that justifies treating the dual-rotation gain as multiplicatively separable and could inflate the reported advantage over the single-rotation benchmark.
- [Simulation results] The simulation section reports sum-rate gains but supplies neither error bars nor Monte-Carlo statistics, and contains no convergence verification (e.g., stationarity measure or objective-value plots) for the alternating optimization procedure on the original non-convex problem. Both omissions are load-bearing for the central claim that the coordinated design yields “significant” gains.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that the work “provide[s] useful insights into near-field dual-rotation design,” yet the analytic separability result is derived only for the far-field regime; a short clarifying sentence linking the two would remove the apparent tension.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments. We address each major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Single-user analysis and multi-user algorithm description] The single-user far-field separability result is invoked to motivate the coordinated-rotation design, yet the multi-user AO algorithm is applied directly to the simulated geometries without an explicit check that every user-BS and user-IRS link satisfies the far-field condition used in the separability derivation. Any deviation would invalidate the structural insight that justifies treating the dual-rotation gain as multiplicatively separable and could inflate the reported advantage over the single-rotation benchmark.
Authors: We thank the referee for this observation. The alternating optimization algorithm itself is derived for the general multi-user case and does not invoke separability; the single-user far-field result serves only as motivation and structural insight. Nevertheless, we agree that an explicit verification strengthens the link to the analysis. In the revision we will add a short calculation confirming that all simulated user-BS and user-IRS distances satisfy the standard far-field criterion (distance > 2D²/λ). revision: yes
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Referee: [Simulation results] The simulation section reports sum-rate gains but supplies neither error bars nor Monte-Carlo statistics, and contains no convergence verification (e.g., stationarity measure or objective-value plots) for the alternating optimization procedure on the original non-convex problem. Both omissions are load-bearing for the central claim that the coordinated design yields “significant” gains.
Authors: We agree that these elements are necessary to support the reported gains. In the revised manuscript we will include Monte-Carlo statistics (mean and standard deviation over independent channel realizations) with error bars and add convergence plots of the objective value versus iteration count for the alternating optimization procedure. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained.
full rationale
The paper derives the multiplicative separability of the dual-rotation gain explicitly from the far-field channel model in the single-user analysis, then applies an alternating optimization (closed-form beamforming, FP-RCG phases, projected gradient on orientations) to the multi-user problem. No equations reduce a claimed prediction to a fitted input by construction, no load-bearing uniqueness theorems are imported via self-citation, and the simulation gains are obtained by comparing the joint design against fixed-orientation and single-rotation baselines rather than being forced by the separability assumption itself. The far-field condition is stated as an explicit modeling choice, not smuggled in.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel echoes?
echoesECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.
the optimized reflected-channel power is multiplicatively separable with respect to Θ and ψ, and the far-field dual-rotation gain satisfies ηFF_dual = ηFF_B ηFF_I
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AlphaCoordinateFixation.leancostAlphaLog_high_calibrated_iff unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Ge(ε) = G0 cos^{2p}(ε)
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
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