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Publications in Scientific Journals:

V. Morgenshtern, E. Riegler, W. Yang, G. Durisi, S. Lin, B. Sturmfels, H. Bölcskei:
"Capacity Pre-Log of Noncoherent SIMO Channels Via Hironaka's Theorem";
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 59 (2013), 7; 4213 - 4229.



English abstract:
We find the capacity pre-log of a temporally correlated Rayleigh block-fading single-input multiple-output (SIMO) channel in the noncoherent setting. It is well known that for block-length L and rank of the channel covariance matrix equal to Q, the capacity pre-log in the single-input single-output (SISO) case is given by 1-Q/L. Here, Q/L can be interpreted as the pre-log penalty incurred by channel uncertainty. Our main result reveals that, by adding only one receive antenna, this penalty can be reduced to 1/L and can, hence, be made to vanish for the block-length L→∞, even if Q/L remains constant as L→∞. Intuitively, even though the SISO channels between the transmit antenna and the two receive antennas are statistically independent, the transmit signal induces enough statistical dependence between the corresponding receive signals for the second receive antenna to be able to resolve the uncertainty associated with the first receive antenna's channel and thereby make the overall system appear coherent. The proof of our main theorem is based on a deep result from algebraic geometry known as Hironaka's Theorem on the Resolution of Singularities.

German abstract:
We find the capacity pre-log of a temporally correlated Rayleigh block-fading single-input multiple-output (SIMO) channel in the noncoherent setting. It is well known that for block-length L and rank of the channel covariance matrix equal to Q, the capacity pre-log in the single-input single-output (SISO) case is given by 1-Q/L. Here, Q/L can be interpreted as the pre-log penalty incurred by channel uncertainty. Our main result reveals that, by adding only one receive antenna, this penalty can be reduced to 1/L and can, hence, be made to vanish for the block-length L→∞, even if Q/L remains constant as L→∞. Intuitively, even though the SISO channels between the transmit antenna and the two receive antennas are statistically independent, the transmit signal induces enough statistical dependence between the corresponding receive signals for the second receive antenna to be able to resolve the uncertainty associated with the first receive antenna's channel and thereby make the overall system appear coherent. The proof of our main theorem is based on a deep result from algebraic geometry known as Hironaka's Theorem on the Resolution of Singularities.


"Official" electronic version of the publication (accessed through its Digital Object Identifier - DOI)
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TIT.2013.2251394

Electronic version of the publication:
http://publik.tuwien.ac.at/files/PubDat_226371.pdf


Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.