Scalable Fluid Antenna Systems: A New Paradigm for Array Signal Processing
read the original abstract
Most existing antenna array-based source localization methods rely on fixed-position arrays (FPAs) and strict assumptions about source field conditions (near-field or far-field), which limits their effectiveness in complex, dynamic real-world scenarios where high-precision localization is required. In contrast, this paper introduces a novel scalable fluid antenna system (SFAS) that can dynamically adjust its aperture configuration to optimize performance for different localization tasks. Within this framework, we develop a two-stage source localization strategy based on the exact spatial geometry (ESG) model: the first stage uses a compact aperture configuration for initial direction-of-arrival (DOA) estimation, while the second stage employs an expanded aperture for enhanced DOA and range estimation. The proposed approach eliminates the traditional need for signal separation or isolation to classify source types and enables a single SFAS array to achieve high localization accuracy without field-specific assumptions, model simplifications, or approximations, representing a new paradigm in array-based source localization. Extensive simulations demonstrate the superiority of the proposed method in terms of localization accuracy, computational efficiency, and robustness to different source types.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Sparse Fluid Antenna Arrays: Continuous Position Design Beyond Classical DOF Limits
Fluid antenna systems with continuously optimized positions achieve linear DOF growth with aperture size D/λ and O(1/D^{2L}) CRB scaling for L sources, outperforming grid-constrained designs via a two-stage FAS-MUSIC ...
-
Rotatable Antenna Enabled Multi-Cell Mixed Near-Field and Far-Field Communications
Rotatable antennas at base stations mitigate inter-cell mixed near- and far-field interference in multi-cell systems, yielding higher sum rates through closed-form analysis for single-user cells and a double-layer opt...
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.