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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2026
  2. This paper presents findings from an extensive 28 GHz mmWave measurement campaign conducted in New York City. The study includes over 20 million power measurements collected from two key scenarios: around-corner (non-line-ofsight due to building blockages) and same-street (nominally lineof-sight without obstructions from street furniture or foliage), covering over 1,300 unique links. For urban macro-cell (UMa) rooftop base stations above local clutter, the dominant angle of arrival (AoA) deviates by only 2 to 3.5 degrees from the direct transmitter/receiver direction. This small deviation allows for effective spatial separation between users, facilitating the future development of Multi-User MIMO algorithms for Beyond5G networks. In the urban micro-cell (UMi) dataset, with base stations below local clutter, a path gain drop of over 20 dB was observed in around-corner segments just 20 meters into a corner. Our Street-Clutter-NLOS path loss model achieves an RMSE of 6.4 dB, compared to 11.9 dB from NLOS 3GPP models. Using the best path loss model to estimate coverage for 90% of users traveling around corners, downlink rates could drop by over 10 times after 50 meters, highlighting the challenges in maintaining consistent user experience over mmWave networks in urban street canyons. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
  3. The management of RF spectrum resources between heterogeneous RF devices has become more challenging with the advent of 5G, 6G and the desire to enable more spectrum sharing interactions in different bands. Most of the research on Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA) algorithms considers non-cooperative scenarios with RF devices using omnidirectional antennas. In this paper, we study the effects of antenna directionality on cooperative DSA. Specifically, we develop a custom simulator for large-scale DSA networks that leverages IEEE 1900.5.2 Spectrum Consumption Models (SCMs) to enable coordination and computation of aggregate interference to deconflict spectrum use in large scale scenarios. SCMs offer a mechanism for RF devices to describe the characteristics of their use of spectrum and their needs in terms of interference protection. We create SCMs for RF systems with directional antennas based on measurements from a directional mmWave antenna and from the operational characteristics defined by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI). We leverage these SCMs to perform a comparative analysis of spectrum use efficiency in cooperative DSA networks with up-to 300 links of transmitter-receiver RF devices using omnidirectional antennas vs similar networks using directional antennas with different half-power beam widths. The simulation results show the benefits to spectrum use efficiency that can be achieved with directional antennas and how largescale DSA methods can be studied and designed with the use of SCMs that incorporate detailed characteristics of directional antennas. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
  4. —We consider a decentralized wireless network with several source-destination pairs sharing a limited number of orthogonal frequency bands. Sources learn to adapt their transmissions (specifically, their band selection strategy) over time, in a decentralized manner, without sharing information with each other. Sources can only observe the outcome of their own transmissions (i.e., success or collision), having no prior knowledge of the network size or of the transmission strategy of other sources. The goal of each source is to maximize their own throughput while striving for network-wide fairness. We propose a novel fully decentralized Reinforcement Learning (RL)-based solution that achieves fairness without coordination. The proposed Fair Share RL(FSRL)solution combines: (i) state augmentation with a semiadaptive time reference; (ii) an architecture that leverages risk control and time difference likelihood; and (iii) a fairness-driven reward structure. We evaluate FSRL in more than 50 network settings with different number of agents, different amounts of available spectrum, in the presence of jammers, and in an ad-hoc setting. Simulation results suggest that, when we compare FSRL with a common baseline RL algorithm from the literature, FSRL can be up to 89.0% fairer (as measured by Jain’s fairness index) in stringent settings with several sources and a single frequency band, and 48.1% fairer on average. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  5. Backscatter power measurements are collected to characterize indoor radar clutter in monostatic sensing applications. A narrowband 28 GHz sounder used a quasimonostatic radar arrangement with an omnidirectional transmit antenna illuminating an indoor scene and a spinning horn receive antenna offset vertically (less than 1 m away) collecting backscattered power as a function of azimuth. Power variation in azimuth around the local average is found to be within 1 dB of a lognormal distribution with a standard deviation of 6.8 dB. Backscatter azimuth spectra are found to be highly variable with location, with cross-correlation coefficients on the order of 0.3 at separations as small as 0.1 m. These statistics are needed for system-level evaluation of RF sensing performance. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
  6. In order to enable the simultaneous transmission and reception of wireless signals on the same frequency, a fullduplex (FD) radio must be capable of suppressing the powerful self-interference (SI) signal emitted from the transmitter and picked up by the receiver. Critically, a major bottleneck in wideband FD deployments is the need for adaptive SI cancellation (SIC) that would allow the FD wireless system to achieve strong cancellation across different settings with distinct electromagnetic environments. In this work, we evaluate the performance of an adaptive wideband FD radio in three different locations and demonstrate that it achieves strong SIC in every location across different bandwidths. 
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  7. Efficient spectrum use represents an important objective given the rapid growth in mobile data and emergence of Beyond-5G networks. ● NOAA passive radiometer receivers operating at the same millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequency used by COSMOS and 5G at 28 GHz and have experienced interference, particularly from a nearby bridge. ● We manually create interference using programmable 28 GHz COSMOS mobile phased array antenna modules (PAAMs) for the creation of Spectrum Consumption Models (SCMs). 
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  8. Massive MIMO has the potential to support demands of next generation networks and emerging applications such as V2V/V2X communication and augmented reality. ● Millimeter-Wave (mmWave) frequencies allow for larger bandwidth as well as compact form factor of antenna arrays with many elements. ● The COSMOS testbed has deployed indoor and outdoor 28GHz phased array antenna modules (PAAMs) to support experimentation with these emerging technologies. ● Mobile PAAMs have been developed to enable experimentation anywhere and with mobility. 
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  9. Full-duplex (FD)wireless communication, the simultaneoustransmissionandreceptionofwirelesssignalsonthesamefrequencychannel,has garneredsignificant attentionfromtheresearch community over the past decade. Softwaredefined radio (SDR) has become instrumental inbridgingthegapfromtheorytoimplementation,providingtheflexibilitynecessarytodesign anddeployFDradionodes, links,andnetworks. AspartoftheFull-DuplexWireless:FromIntegratedCircuitstoNetworks(FlexICoN)project, wehavedevelopedthreegenerationsofIC-based FDradiosthatutilizeGNURadioastheprimary controlandsignalprocessingplatform.Thispaperpresentsanoverviewof thedesignconsiderationsandtechniquesforimplementingFDin GNURadio,fromthetransmitandreceivesignal processingchainstobroadertestbedintegration. 
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  10. A simple model for average backscatter power from clutter is developed for indoor RF sensing applications and verified through measurements. A narrowband 28 GHz sounder used a quasi-monostatic radar arrangement with an omnidirectional transmit antenna illuminating an indoor scene and a spinning horn receive antenna less than 1 m away collecting backscattered power as a function of azimuth. Median average backscatter power was found to vary over a 12 dB range, with average power generally decreasing with increasing room size. A deterministic model of average backscattered power dependent on distance to nearest wall and clutter reflection coefficient reproduces observations with 4.0 dB RMS error. 
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