Rotatable Antenna-Enabled Mobile Edge Computing
This work addresses latency-critical users in mobile edge computing, but it is incremental as it applies existing optimization techniques to a new antenna technology.
The paper tackles the challenge of enhancing communication reliability and computation efficiency in mobile edge computing (MEC) to support low-latency services, by proposing a rotatable antenna-enabled system that jointly optimizes resource allocation, beamforming, and antenna angles, resulting in significantly reduced maximum computation latency compared to conventional methods.
In the evolving landscape of mobile edge computing (MEC), enhancing communication reliability and computation efficiency to support increasingly stringent low-latency services remains a fundamental challenge. Rotatable antenna (RA) is a promising technology that introduces new spatial degrees of freedom (DoFs) to tackle this challenge. In this letter, we investigate an RA-enabled MEC system where antenna boresight directions can be independently adjusted to proactively improve wireless channel conditions for latency-critical users. We aim to minimize the maximum computation latency by jointly optimizing the MEC server computing resource allocation, receive beamforming, and the deflection angles of all RAs. To address the resulting non-convex problem, we develop an efficient alternating optimization (AO) framework. Specifically, the optimal edge computing resource allocation is derived based on the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) conditions. Given the computing resources, the receive beamforming is optimized using semidefinite relaxation (SDR) combined with a bisection search. Furthermore, the RA deflection angles are optimized via fractional programming (FP) and successive convex approximation (SCA). Simulation results verify that the proposed RA-enabled MEC scheme significantly reduces the maximum computation latency compared with conventional benchmark methods.