Learning from the sky: Flying access networks for beyond 5G

Gesbert, David
WCSP 2017, Keynote Speech, 9th International Conference on Wireless Communications and Signal Processing, 11-13 October 2017, Nanjing, China

The use of flying robots (drones) carrying radio transceiver equipment is the new promising frontier in our quest towards ever more flexible, adaptable and spectrally efficient wireless networks. Beyond obvious challenges within regulatory, control, navigation, and operational domains, the deployment of autonomous flying radio access network (Fly-RANs) also come with a number of exciting new research problems such as the issue of optimal automatic placement of the drones in non-trivial propagation scenarios (i.e. scenarios where the optimal placement is not just dictated by a trivial geometry argument due to shadowing effects, e.g. in cities).  We present several different approaches, lying at the cross-roads between machine learning, signal processing and optimization. One approach involves the reconstruction of a city map from sampled radio measurements which can have application beyond the realm of communications.


Type:
Talk
City:
Nanjing
Date:
2017-10-11
Department:
Communication systems
Eurecom Ref:
5680
Copyright:
© 2017 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.
See also:

PERMALINK : https://www.eurecom.fr/publication/5680