DocumentCode
3604180
Title
Achieving Secrecy Without Knowing the Number of Eavesdropper Antennas
Author
Biao He ; Xiangyun Zhou ; Abhayapala, Thushara D.
Author_Institution
Res. Sch. of Eng., Australian Nat. Univ., Canberra, ACT, Australia
Volume
14
Issue
12
fYear
2015
Firstpage
7030
Lastpage
7043
Abstract
The existing research on physical layer security commonly assumes the number of eavesdropper antennas to be known. Although this assumption allows one to easily compute the achievable secrecy rate, it can hardly be realized in practice. In this paper, we provide an innovative approach to studying secure communication systems without knowing the number of eavesdropper antennas by introducing the concept of spatial constraint into physical layer security. Specifically, the eavesdropper is assumed to have a limited spatial region to place (possibly an infinite number of) antennas. From a practical point of view, knowing the spatial constraint of the eavesdropper is much easier than knowing the number of eavesdropper antennas. We derive the achievable secrecy rates of the spatially-constrained system with and without friendly jamming. We show that a non-zero secrecy rate is achievable with the help of a friendly jammer, even if the eavesdropper places an infinite number of antennas in its spatial region. Furthermore, we find that the achievable secrecy rate does not monotonically increase with the jamming power, and hence, we obtain the closed-form solution of the optimal jamming power that maximizes the secrecy rate.
Keywords
antenna arrays; jamming; telecommunication security; achievable secrecy rate computation; optimal jamming power; physical layer security; secrecy capacity; secure communication systems; Jamming; Physical layer; Receiving antennas; Physical layer security; friendly jamming; secrecy capacity; spatial constraints;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Wireless Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1276
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TWC.2015.2463818
Filename
7175051
Link To Document