Performance evaluation of THz wireless systems under the joint impact of misalignment fading and phase noise
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 18:51 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Misalignment fading and local oscillator phase noise jointly reduce average SINR and raise outage probability in multi-carrier THz systems.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
After establishing a suitable system model that takes into account the particularities of the THz channel, as well as the transceivers characteristics, simulation results quantify the joint impact of misalignment fading and PHN in terms of average SINR and OP.
What carries the argument
The system model that incorporates THz channel particularities and transceiver characteristics to capture the joint statistical behavior of misalignment fading and phase noise.
Load-bearing premise
The system model accurately captures the joint statistical behavior of misalignment fading and local-oscillator phase noise for the multi-carrier THz scenario under study.
What would settle it
Real-world measurements from a multi-carrier THz link that show average SINR and outage probability values differing substantially from the simulated results under the same misalignment and phase noise conditions.
read the original abstract
In this paper, we investigate the joint impact of misalignment fading and local oscillator (LO) phase noise (PHN) in multi-carrier terahertz (THz) wireless systems. In more detail, after establishing a suitable system model that takes into account the particularities of the THz channel, as well as the transceivers characteristics, we present simulation results that quantify the joint impact of misalignment fading and PHN in terms of average signal-to-interference-plus-noise-ratio (SINR) and outage probability (OP).
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript develops a system model for multi-carrier THz wireless links that incorporates THz-specific propagation effects together with transceiver impairments, then uses Monte-Carlo simulation to quantify the combined influence of misalignment fading and local-oscillator phase noise on average SINR and outage probability.
Significance. If the reported simulation outcomes are reproducible, the work supplies concrete numerical evidence of the performance penalty incurred when both impairments act simultaneously, which is useful for link-budget design and waveform selection in the THz band. The simulation framework itself constitutes a reusable testbed for exploring additional THz impairments.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that simulation results are presented but does not indicate the number of Monte-Carlo realizations, the range of misalignment variances, or the PHN 3 dB bandwidths employed; adding these details would improve reproducibility.
- [System Model] Notation for the combined channel gain (misalignment fading multiplied by the PHN-induced phase term) should be introduced once in the system-model section and used consistently thereafter to avoid repeated inline definitions.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive review and the recommendation to accept the manuscript.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity in simulation-based evaluation
full rationale
The paper positions its contribution as establishing an explicit system model for THz channels (including misalignment fading and LO phase noise) followed by Monte Carlo simulation to quantify average SINR and outage probability. No algebraic derivation, closed-form prediction, or first-principles claim is advanced that could reduce to fitted parameters, self-citations, or input definitions by construction. The central results are obtained by direct simulation of the stated model; therefore none of the enumerated circularity patterns apply. The work is self-contained against external benchmarks in the sense that its outputs are generated from the model rather than asserted as independent predictions.
discussion (0)
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