How user throughput depends on the traffic demand in large cellular networks

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Publication:6243797

arXiv1307.8409MaRDI QIDQ6243797FDOQ6243797


Authors: Bartlomiej Blaszczyszyn, Miodrag Jovanovic, Mohamed Kadhem Karray Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 31 July 2013

Abstract: Little's law allows to express the mean user throughput in any region of the network as the ratio of the mean traffic demand to the steady-state mean number of users in this region. Corresponding statistics are usually collected in operational networks for each cell. Using ergodic arguments and Palm theoretic formalism, we show that the global mean user throughput in the network is equal to the ratio of these two means in the steady state of the "typical cell". Here, both means account for double averaging: over time and network geometry, and can be related to the per-surface traffic demand, base-station density and the spatial distribution of the SINR. This latter accounts for network irregularities, shadowing and idling cells via cell-load equations. We validate our approach comparing analytical and simulation results for Poisson network model to real-network cell-measurements.













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