Abstract

We study the feasibility of the total power minimization problem subject to power budget and Signal-to-Interference-plus-Noise Ratio (SINR) constraints in cognitive radio networks. As both the primary and the secondary users are allowed to transmit simultaneously on a shared spectrum, uncontrolled access of secondary users degrades the performance of primary users and can even lead to system infeasibility. To find the largest feasible set of secondary users (i.e., the system capacity) that can be supported in the network, we formulate a vector-cardinality optimization problem. This nonconvex problem is however hard to solve, and we propose a convex relaxation heuristic based on the sum-of-infeasibilities in optimization theory. Our methodology leads to the notion of admission price for spectrum access that can characterize the tradeoff between the total energy consumption and the system capacity. Price-driven algorithms for joint power and admission control are then proposed that quantify the benefits of energy-infeasibility balance. Numerical results are presented to show that our algorithms are theoretically sound and practically implementable.

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