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SRCOM

Hybrid Terrestrial/Satellite Air Interface for 5G and Beyond

The explosive growth of the mobile data traffic over the past few years along with the 5G targeted 1000-fold capacity improvement goal motivates the significant need for innovative solutions. These solutions should not include only the cellular, but also the optical fiber and the satellite infrastructures.

Considering these future requirements, SRCOM aims at developing hybrid terrestrial/satellite air interface for future networks. The focus is mainly on three main areas, satellite system enhancement, large-scale antenna design and signal processing schemes for hybrid satellite/terrestrial systems, and improvement of the free space optic communications (FSO) schemes and optical-wireless convergence.

For the satellite system enhancement, we are developing advanced techniques for multi-beam satellite with centralized and distributed gateways. GEO and Non-GEO constellations are considered. These techniques include scheduling and radio resource management (RRM) schemes to take advantage of the payload flexibility. Moreover, the techniques include non-orthogonal superposition transmitting and receiving strategies to efficiently use the available resources. In order to reduce the deployment cost, SRCOM is investigating gate virtualization which aim at relocating most of the gateway link and physical layer functions to remote data center . Additionally, the department is developing efficient satellite content delivery techniques will be taking into account the particularity of the satellite system as well as the caching capability of some of the terrestrial network elements.

The investigation on the improvement of the FSO systems is focusing on overcoming the point-to-point optical wireless links challenges like multi-path propagation, optical noise or strong optical interference. Additionally, the feasibility of implementing an all-analog fronthaul that connects a large-number of low-cost remote antennas over a single-fiber passive optical network is currently under investigation.

Finally, cloud services as an overlaying technology to coordinate transmitters from different operators. These services are meant to deal with a large amount of data signaling and information which might eventually collapse the backhaul infrastructure and; thus, Big Data techniques must be employed for levering the communication overhead generated from the coordination. Big data constitutes also the solution for dealing with the amounts of data generated by Internet of things applications that will become an important part of future networks.