2.9NIMay 3
Throughput Analysis and On-Board Buffer Sizing for Hybrid RF and Optical LEO SatellitesCao-Vien Phung, Thomas Röthig, Admela Jukan
Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite networks are increasingly adopting laser (Free Space Optics, FSO) links to provide high-capacity communications. Although laser inter-satellite links offer high throughput and low latency, RF up- and downlinks remain necessary to maintain connectivity during optical outages caused by adverse atmospheric conditions. In such hybrid link scenarios, satellite buffer design remains a key challenge, since up- and downlink traffic must be buffered and forwarded among satellite nodes. The hybrid RF/FSO scenario requires careful transmission scheduling, especially at envisioned optical transmission rates of 100Gb/s and beyond, making buffer sizing critical under strict onboard energy and weight constraints. Thus, this paper analyzes throughput performance and buffer sizing in hybrid RF/laser satellite networks with finite buffer capacity, interference-aware scheduling, and weather-dependent laser link outage probabilities. Numerical results indicate that laser communications bring significant performance gains. Instead of increasing the transmission power of the satellite to maximize the throughput, we can select a suitable transmission scheduling priority to achieve a maximum throughput, while minimizing the buffer requirement, and lowering packet loss probability under realistic operational conditions and constraints.
CRJun 14, 2018
An Effective Privacy-Preserving Data Coding in Peer-To-Peer NetworkNgoc Hong Tran, Cao-Vien Phung, Binh Quoc Nguyen et al.
Coding Opportunistically (COPE) is a simple but very effective data coding mechanism in the wireless network. However, COPE leaves risks for attackers easily getting the private information saved in the packets, when they move through the network to their destination nodes. Hence in our work, a lightweight cryptographic approach, namely SCOPE, is proposed to consolidate COPE against the honest-but-curious and malicious attacks. Honest-but-curious attack serves adversaries who accurately obey the protocol but try to learn as much private information as possible for their curiosity. Additionally, this kind of attack is not destructive consequently. However, it may leave the backdoor for the more dangerous attacks carrying catastrophes to the system. Malicious attack tries to learn not only the private information but also modifies the packet on harmful purposes. In our work, the SCOPE protocol is defensive to the both attacks. The private information in the COPE packet are encrypted by Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC), and an additional information is inserted into SCOPE packets served for the authentication process using the lightweight hash Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA). We then prove our new protocol is still guaranteed to be a secure method of data coding, and to be light to effectively operate in the peer-to-peer wireless network