Achieving secret communication for fast rayleigh fading channels

  • Authors:
  • Zang Li;Roy Yates;Wade Trappe

  • Affiliations:
  • Wireless Information Network Laboratory, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rutgers University, North Brunswick, NJ;Wireless Information Network Laboratory, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rutgers University;Wireless Information Network Laboratory, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rutgers University

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
  • Year:
  • 2010

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Abstract

We consider a secret communication scenario where Alice wants to transmit secretly to Bob in presence of a passive eavesdropper Eve. The Alice-Bob channel is a fixed-SNR AWGN channel, while the Alice-Eve channel is a fast Rayleigh fading channel, with the channel states only known to Eve. Alice knows the statistics of Alice-Eve channel, but not the exact realizations. We investigate the achievable secrecy rates for this channel model with Gaussian signaling and discrete signaling. For Gaussian signaling, several transmission strategies according to the main channel's relative channel gain are proposed and evaluated. For discrete signaling, achievable secrecy rates with Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) are evaluated. When Bob's channel is much better than Eve's channel, simple Gaussian signaling can perform close to the upper bound, and is better than the rate achieved with M-QAM. When Bob's channel gain is on average worse than the eavesdropper's average channel gain, positive secrecy rate can still be achieved for Gaussian signaling with artificial noise injection and a burst signaling strategy. Moreover, M-QAM can outperform Gaussian signaling. The key factor that enables secret communication in this case is that both M-QAM and artificial noise limit the leakage of information when Eve's channel is unusually good.