Abstract

In existing communication systems, the channel state information of each user equipment (UE) should be repeatedly estimated when it moves to a new position or when another UE takes its place. The underlying ambient information, including the specific layout of potential reflectors, which provides more detailed information about all UEs’ channel structures, has not been fully explored and exploited. In this paper, we rethink the mm-wave channel estimation problem in a new and indirect way, i.e., instead of estimating the resultant composite channel response at each time, and for any specific location, we first conduct the ambient perception exploiting the fascinating radar capability of a mm-wave antenna array and then accomplish the location-based sparse channel reconstruction. In this way, the sparse channel for a quasi-static UE arriving at a specific location can be rapidly synthesized based on the perceived ambient information, thus greatly reducing the signaling overhead and online computational complexity. Based on the reconstructed mm-wave channel, single-beam mm-wave communication is designed and evaluated which shows an excellent performance. Such an approach, in fact, integrates the radar with communication, which may possibly open a new paradigm for future communication system design.

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