Abstract

The recently developed reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RISs) are capable of improving the coverage of space–air–ground integrated networks (SAGINs), where the signals can be reflected in the desired direction without relying on power-thirsty radio-frequency (RF) chains. However, in the face of the substantially increased Doppler frequency, the classic orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) becomes inadequate in supporting RIS for the following reasons. First, the detrimental doubly selective fading leads to intersymbol interference (ISI) and intercarrier interference (ICI), which result in error floors for OFDM operating in the time–frequency (TF) domain. Second, it is far from trivial to configure RIS based on the time-varying fading channels. Third, the interpolation-based TF-domain channel estimation methods become impractical for the high-Doppler and high-dimensional RIS systems. Against this background, in this article, we propose the powerful 2-D orthogonal time–frequency space (OTFS) modulation for RIS-aided SAGINs, which transforms the time-varying fading encountered in the TF-domain to the time-invariant fading in the delay-Doppler (DD) domain. More explicitly, first, for the first time in the literature, we devise the DD-domain channel model of RIS-assisted SAGINs in the face of doubly selective fading. Second, in order to facilitate the RIS configuration in the DD-domain, we propose to create “virtual” Doppler frequencies that guide the phase changes at the RIS, even though the RIS phase rotations do not suffer from Doppler effects. Third, we conceive an attractive DD-domain RIS channel estimation method that can support both OFDM and OTFS, where the TF-domain interpolation is eliminated. Our simulation results demonstrate that the proposed DD-domain RIS configuration and channel estimation methods for both OFDM and OTFS are capable of mitigating the error floors encountered in the TF-domain. Furthermore, our simulation results confirm that OTFS-based RIS-assisted SAGIN systems are capable of outperforming their OFDM counterparts and exhibit excellent performance across a wide range of SAGIN channel parameters including the Ricean K factor, Doppler frequency, delay spread, coverage distance, and carrier frequency.

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