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Networked ISAC for Low-Altitude Economy: Coordinated Transmit Beamforming and UAV Trajectory Design

  • Gaoyuan Cheng
  • , Xianxin Song
  • , Zhonghao Lyu
  • , Jie Xu*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

This paper exploits the networked integrated sensing and communications (ISAC) to support low-altitude economy (LAE), in which a set of networked ground base stations (GBSs) cooperatively transmit joint information and sensing signals to communicate with multiple authorized uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs) and concurrently detect unauthorized objects over the interested region in the three-dimensional (3D) space. We assume that each GBS is equipped with uniform linear array (ULA) antennas, which are deployed either horizontally or vertically to the ground. We also consider two types of UAV receivers, which have and do not have the capability of canceling the interference caused by dedicated sensing signals, respectively. Under each setup, we jointly design the coordinated transmit beamforming at multiple GBSs together with the authorized UAVs' trajectory control and their GBS associations, for enhancing the authorized UAVs' communication performance while ensuring the sensing requirements. In particular, we aim to maximize the average sum rate of authorized UAVs over a given flight period, subject to the minimum illumination power constraints toward the interested 3D sensing region, the maximum transmit power constraints at individual GBSs, and the flight constraints of UAVs. These problems are highly non-convex and challenging to solve, due to the involvement of binary UAV-GBS association variables as well as the coupling of beamforming and trajectory variables. To solve these non-convex problems, we propose efficient algorithms by using the techniques of alternating optimization, successive convex approximation, and semi-definite relaxation. Numerical results show that the proposed joint coordinated transmit beamforming and UAV trajectory designs efficiently balance the sensing-communication performance tradeoffs and significantly outperform various benchmarks. It is also shown that the horizontally placed antennas lead to enhanced performance compared with their vertical counterparts due to the more flexible multi-beam design, and the sensing interference cancellation ability at UAV receivers is advantageous for further enhancing ISAC performance.

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Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5832-5847
Number of pages16
JournalIEEE Transactions on Communications
Volume73
Issue number8
Online published11 Feb 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2025

Funding

The work was supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grants No. 62471424, the Basic Research Project No. HZQB-KCZYZ-2021067 of Hetao Shenzhen-HK S&T Cooperation Zone, the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grants No. 92267202 and U2001208, the Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Future Networks of Intelligence under grant No. 2022B1212010001, and the Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence No. ZDSYS201707251409055. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 2024 IEEE/CIC International Conference on Communications in China (ICCC) [DOI: 10.1109/ICCC62479.2024.10681882].

Research Keywords

  • Autonomous aerial vehicles
  • Trajectory
  • Array signal processing
  • Three-dimensional displays
  • Interference
  • Integrated sensing and communication
  • Receiving antennas
  • Monitoring
  • Transmitting antennas
  • Aircraft
  • Networked integrated sensing and communications (ISAC)
  • low-altitude economy
  • uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV)
  • coordinated transmit beamforming
  • trajectory design
  • optimization

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