Abstract

Recently, it has been shown that in a cache-enabled interference channel, the storage at the transmit and receive sides are of equal value in terms of Degrees of Freedom (DoF). This is derived by assuming full Channel State Information at the Transmitter (CSIT). In this paper, we consider a more practical scenario, where a training/feedback phase should exist for obtaining CSIT, during which instantaneous channel state is not known to the transmitters. This results in a combination of delayed and current CSIT availability, called mixed CSIT. In this setup, we derive DoF of a cache-enabled interference channel with mixed CSIT, which depends on the memory available at transmit and receive sides as well as the training/feedback phase duration. In contrast to the case of having full CSIT, we prove that, in our setup, the storage at the receive side is more valuable than the one at the transmit side. This is due to the fact that cooperation opportunities granted by transmitters' caches are strongly based on instantaneous CSIT availability. However, multi-casting opportunities provided by receivers' caches are robust to such imperfection.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call