Sensing-Aided Secure Multicast in Two-Level Rotatable Antenna-Enabled ISAC Systems: Modeling and Optimization
For ISAC systems requiring secure multicast, this work addresses the challenge of passive eavesdroppers with unknown CSI by leveraging antenna rotations.
The paper proposes a two-level rotatable antenna scheme for sensing-aided secure multicast, achieving robust secrecy against passive eavesdroppers with imperfect sensing. Simulations demonstrate effectiveness and robustness over benchmarks.
In physical layer security, the channel state information (CSI) of passive eavesdroppers is usually difficult to obtain, which has motivated sensing-aided secure communication (SASC). However, in secure multicast scenarios, conventional fixed-position antennas (FPAs) provide limited spatial flexibility for simultaneously serving multiple legitimate users and suppressing leakage toward possible eavesdropper directions. Motivated by this, a novel two-level rotatable antenna (RA)-enabled sensing-aided secure multicast scheme is proposed in this paper. In the proposed architecture, array-level and element-wise rotations are jointly exploited with analog beamforming for user enhancement and leakage suppression. To characterize imperfect eavesdropper sensing, the maximum likelihood estimator and the corresponding Cramér-Rao bound (CRB) are derived to quantify the angular estimation accuracy. Based on the derived CRB, a probabilistic angular uncertainty region is constructed. A CRB-aware max-min secrecy-rate problem is then formulated by evaluating the eavesdropper leakage over sampled high-probability directions within this region. The non-convex problem is handled through a tractable lower-bound reformulation based on Jensen's inequality and smooth approximation, followed by an alternating optimization algorithm combining manifold optimization and projected-gradient updates. Simulation results show the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed scheme compared with various benchmarks. Beam patterns further reveal that array-level and element-wise rotations play complementary roles in maintaining strong gains toward legitimate users and forming a low-gain region over the eavesdropper angular uncertainty interval.