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  1. Current cellular systems use pilot-aided statistical channel state information (S-CSI) estimation and limited feedback schemes to aid in link adaptation and scheduling decisions. However, in the presence of pulsed radar signals, pilot-aided S-CSI is inaccurate since interference statistics on pilot and nonpilot resources can be different. Moreover, the channel will be bimodal as a result of the periodic interference. In this paper, we propose a max-min heuristic to estimate the post-equalizer SINR in the case of non-pilot pulsed radar interference, and characterize its distribution as a function of noise variance and interference power. We observe that the proposed heuristic incurs low computational complexity, and is robust beyond a certain SINR threshold for different modulation schemes, especially for QPSK. This enables us to develop a comprehensive semi-blind framework to estimate the wideband SINR metric that is commonly used for S-CSI quantization in 3GPP Long-Term Evolution (LTE) and New Radio (NR) networks. Finally, we propose dual CSI feedback for practical radar-cellular spectrum sharing, to enable accurate CSI acquisition in the bimodal channel. We demonstrate significant improvements in throughput, block error rate and retransmission-induced latency for LTE-Advanced Pro when compared to conventional pilot-aided S-CSI estimation and limited feedback schemes. 
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  2. In this paper, we consider an underlay radar-massive MIMO spectrum sharing scenario in which massive MIMO base stations (BSs) with elevation beamforming capabilities are allowed to operate outside a circular exclusion zone centered at the radar. Modeling the locations of the massive MIMO BSs as a homogeneous Poisson point process (PPP), we derive an analytical expression for a tight upper bound on the average interference at the radar due to cellular transmissions. The challenge lies in bounding the worst-case elevation angle for each massive MIMO BS, for which we devise a novel construction based on the circumradius distribution of a typical Poisson-Voronoi (PV) cell. While these worst-case elevation angles are correlated for neighboring BSs due to the structure of the PV tessellation, it does not explicitly appear in our analysis because of our focus on the average interference.We also provide an estimate of the nominal average interference by approximating each cell as a circle with area equal to the average area of the typical cell. Using these results, we demonstrate that the gap between the two results remains approximately constant with respect to the exclusion zone radius. Our analysis reveals useful trends in average interference power, as a function of key deployment parameters such as radar/BS antenna heights, number of antenna elements per radar/BS, BS density, and exclusion zone radius. 
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  3. This paper provides a methodology to study the PHY layer vulnerability of wireless protocols in hostile radio environments. Our approach is based on testing the vulnerabilities of a system by analyzing the individual subsystems. By targeting an individual subsystem or a combination of subsystems at a time, we can infer the weakest part and revise it to improve the overall system performance. We apply our methodology to 4G LTE downlink by considering each control channel as a subsystem. We also develop open-source software enabling research and education using software-defined radios. We present experimental results with open-source LTE systems and shows how the different subsystems behave under targeted interference. The analysis for the LTE downlink shows that the synchronization signals (PSS/SSS) are very resilient to interference, whereas the downlink pilots or Cell-Specific Reference signals (CRS) are the most susceptible to a synchronized protocol-aware interferer. We also analyze the severity of control channel attacks for different LTE configurations. Our methodology and tools allow rapid evaluation of the PHY layer reliability in harsh signaling environments, which is an asset to improve current standards and develop new and robust wireless protocols. 
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  4. The long-term evolution (LTE) has spread around the globe for deploying 4G cellular networks for com-mercial use. These days, it is gaining interest for new applica-tions where mobile broadband services can be of benefit to so-ciety. Whereas the basic concepts of LTE are well understood, its long-term evolution has just started. New areas of R&D look into operation in unlicensed and shared bands, where new ver-sions of LTE need to coexist with other communication systems and radars. Virginia Tech has developed an LTE testbed with unique features to spur LTE research and education. This pa-per introduces Virginia Tech’s LTE testbed, its main features and components, access and configuration mechanisms, and some of the research thrusts that it enables. It is unique in sev-eral aspects, including the extensive use of software-defined radio technology, the combination of industry-grade hardware and software-based systems, and the remote access feature for user-defined configurations of experiments and radio frequency paths. 
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