ITITMar 15

Shared Sky, Shared Spectrum: Coordinated Satellite-5G Networks for Low-Altitude Economy

arXiv:2603.1419684.5h-index: 6
AI Analysis

This addresses the communication needs for the booming low-altitude economy, offering an incremental improvement over full integration for rapid deployment.

The paper tackles the challenge of providing effective communication for low-altitude aircrafts by proposing a partially-integrated network where satellites and 5G systems coordinate spectrum sharing with coarse synchronization, achieving substantial performance gains with low overhead and complexity.

Driven by both technological development and practical demands, the low-altitude economy relying on low-altitude aircrafts (LAAs) is booming. However, neither satellites nor terrestrial fifth-generation (5G) networks alone can effectively satisfy the communication requirements for ubiquitous lowaltitude coverage. While full integration of satellites and 5G networks offers theoretical benefits, the associated overhead and complexity pose significant challenges for rapid deployment. As a more economical and immediately viable alternative, this paper investigates partially-integrated networks where satellites and 5G systems operate with coarse synchronization yet achieve coordinated spectrum sharing, pooling their capabilities to jointly serve LAAs. Leveraging the inherent position-awareness of LAAs, we propose a framework for joint time-frequency spectrum sharing with an adaptive synchronization time scale, where only large-scale channel state information (CSI) is required. To avoid solving the NP-hard optimization problem directly, link-feature-aided clustering is employed following a divide-andconquer strategy. The proposed framework achieves substantial performance gains with low overhead and complexity, enabling swift advancement of low-altitude applications while paving the way for future integrated satellite-terrestrial network evolution.

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