This paper examines the uplink transmission of a single-antenna handsheld user to a cluster of satellites, with a focus on utilizing the inter-satellite links to enable cooperative signal detection. Two cases are studied: one with full CSI and the other with partial CSI between satellites. The two cases are compared in terms of capacity, overhead, and bit error rate. Additionally, the impact of channel estimation error is analyzed in both designs, and robust detection techniques are proposed to handle channel uncertainty up to a certain level. The performance of each case is demonstrated, and a comparison is made with conventional satellite communication schemes where only one satellite can connect to a user. The results of our study reveal that the proposed constellation with a total of 3168 satellites in orbit can enable a capacity of 800 Mbits/sec through cooperation of $12$ satellites with and occupied bandwidth of 500 MHz. In contrast, conventional satellite communication approaches with the same system parameters yield a significantly lower capacity of less than 150 Mbits/sec for the nearest satellite.
Intelligent reflecting surface (IRS) as a promising technology rendering high throughput in future communication systems is compatible with various communication techniques such as non-orthogonal multiple-access (NOMA). In this paper, the downlink transmission of IRS-assisted NOMA communication is considered while undergoing imperfect channel state information (CSI). Consequently, a robust IRS-aided NOMA design is proposed by solving the sum-rate maximization problem to jointly find the optimal beamforming vectors for the access point and the passive reflection matrix for the IRS, using the penalty dual decomposition (PDD) scheme. This problem can be solved through an iterative algorithm, with closed-form solutions in each step, and it is shown to have very close performance to its upper bound obtained from perfect CSI scenario. We also present a trellis-based method for optimal discrete phase shift selection of IRS which is shown to outperform the conventional quantization method. Our results show that the proposed algorithms, for both continuous and discrete IRS, have very low computational complexity compared to other schemes in the literature. Furthermore, we conduct a performance comparison from achievable sum-rate standpoint between IRS-aided NOMA and IRS-aided orthogonal multiple access (OMA), which demonstrates superiority of NOMA compared to OMA in case of a tolerated channel uncertainty.
In this paper, the problem of pilot contamination in a multi-cell massive multiple input multiple output (M-MIMO) system is addressed using deep reinforcement learning (DRL). To this end, a pilot assignment strategy is designed that adapts to the channel variations while maintaining a tolerable pilot contamination effect. Using the angle of arrival (AoA) information of the users, a cost function, portraying the reward, is presented, defining the pilot contamination effects in the system. Numerical results illustrate that the DRL-based scheme is able to track the changes in the environment, learn the near-optimal pilot assignment, and achieve a close performance to that of the optimum pilot assignment performed by exhaustive search, while maintaining a low computational complexity.