Dokumentdetails
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2405.15548

Thema
Computer Science - Networking and ... Computer Science - Emerging Techno...
Autor
Mahapatra, Byomakesh Gupta, Deepika Sharma, Pankaj Kumar
Kategorie

Computer Science

Jahr

2024

Auflistungsdatum

29.05.2024

Schlüsselwörter
article uavs c-ran
Metrisch

Zusammenfassung

The deployment of beyond fifth-generation (5G) infrastructure over disaster-affected regions, temporary hotspot situations (e.g., massive gatherings, etc.), complex terrains (e.g., sea, hills, marshes, etc.) poses numerous challenges for cellular service providers.

Recently, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have emerged as potential candidates to overcome the aforementioned technical issues based on their multi-role capabilities to serve as aerial base stations, mobile relays, and flying wireless access points.

As such, the UAVs can act as portable platforms that can be deployed immediately on demand without requiring massive ground infrastructure to support wireless services.

This article introduces the integration of UAVs to cloud radio access networks (C-RAN) for beyond 5G applications.

The article mainly focuses on the underlying opportunities and challenges to realize the UAV-assisted C-RAN (UC-RAN) architecture in view of three generic application scenarios, i.e., disaster management, hotspots, and complex terrains.

A preliminary performance analysis via simulation is further provided for the proposed UC-RAN under hotspot application scenario based on the relevant metrics.

;Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 2 Tables, Submitted for possible publication as a magazine article

Mahapatra, Byomakesh,Gupta, Deepika,Sharma, Pankaj Kumar, 2024, UAV-assisted C-RAN for On-demand Cellular Coverage: Opportunities and Challenges

Dokumentieren

Öffnen

Teilen

Quelle

Artikel empfohlen von ES/IODE AI

Lung cancer risk and exposure to air pollution: a multicenter North China case–control study involving 14604 subjects
lung cancer case–control air pollution never-smokers nomogram model controls lung-related 14604 subjects north polluted consistent smokers quit exposure lung cancer risk air people factor smoking pollution study history