Relay channel
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, a relay channel is a
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model of the
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between a
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and a receiver aided by one or more intermediate relay nodes.


General discrete-time memoryless relay channel

A discrete memoryless single-relay channel can be modelled as four finite sets, X_1, X_2, Y_1, and Y, and a conditional probability distribution p(y,y_1, x_1,x_2) on these sets. The probability distribution of the choice of symbols selected by the encoder and the relay encoder is represented by p(x_1,x_2).

               o------------------o
               ,    Relay Encoder  , 
               o------------------o
                 Λ              , 
                 ,  y1        x2 , 
                 ,               V
o---------o x1 o------------------o y  o---------o
,  Encoder , --->,    p(y,y1, x1,x2)  , --->,  Decoder , 
o---------o    o------------------o    o---------o
There exist three main relaying schemes: Decode-and-Forward, Compress-and-Forward and Amplify-and-Forward. The first two schemes were first proposed in the pioneer article by Cover and El-Gamal. * Decode-and-Forward (DF): In this relaying scheme, the relay decodes the source message in one block and transmits the re-encoded message in the following block. The achievable rate of DF is known as \max_ \min \left( I\left( x_1; y_1 , x_2 \right) , I\left( x_1, x_2 ; y \right) \right) . * Compress-and-Forward (CF): In this relaying scheme, the relay quantizes the received signal in one block and transmits the encoded version of the quantized received signal in the following block. The achievable rate of CF is known as \max_ I\left( x_1; \hat, y , x_2 \right) subject to I(x_2;y) \geq I(y_1; \hat y_1 , y) . * Amplify-and-Forward (AF): In this relaying scheme, the relay sends an amplified version of the received signal in the last time-slot. Comparing with DF and CF, AF requires much less delay as the relay node operates time-slot by time-slot. Also, AF requires much less computing power as no decoding or quantizing operation is performed at the relay side.


Cut-set upper bound

The first upper bound on the capacity of the relay channel is derived in the pioneer article by Cover and El-Gamal and is known as the Cut-set upper bound. This bound says C \leq \max_ \min \left( I\left( x_1; y_1, y , x_2 \right) , I\left( x_1, x_2 ; y \right) \right) where C is the capacity of the relay channel. The first term and second term in the minimization above are called broadcast bound and multi-access bound, respectively.


Degraded relay channel

A relay channel is said to be degraded if ''y'' depends on x_1 only through y_1 and x_2, i.e., p(y , x_1, x_2, y_1) = p(y , x_2, y_1). In the article by Cover and El-Gamal it is shown that the capacity of the degraded relay channel can be achieved using Decode-and-Forward scheme. It turns out that the capacity in this case is equal to the Cut-set upper bound.


Reversely degraded relay channel

A relay channel is said to be reversely degraded if p(y, y_1 , x_1, x_2) = p(y , x_1, x_2)p(y_1 , y, x_2). Cover and El-Gamal proved that the Direct Transmission Lower Bound (wherein relay is not used) is tight when the relay channel is reversely degraded.


Feedback relay channel

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Relay without delay channel

In a relay-without-delay channel (RWD), each transmitted relay symbol can depend on relay's past as well as present received symbols. Relay Without Delay was shown to achieve rates that are outside the Cut-set upper bound. Recently, it was also shown that instantaneous relays (a special case of relay-without-delay) are capable of improving not only the capacity, but also Degrees of Freedom (DoF) of the 2-user interference channel.


See also

*
Cooperative diversity Cooperative diversity is a cooperative multiple antenna technique for improving or maximising total network channel capacities for any given set of bandwidths which exploits user diversity by decoding the combined signal of the relayed signal and t ...
*
Relay (disambiguation) A relay is an electric switch operated by a signal in one circuit to control another circuit. Relay may also refer to: Historical * Stage station, a place where exhausted horses being used for transport could be exchanged for fresh ones * Cursus ...


References

* Thomas M. Cover and Abbas El Gamal,
Capacity theorems for the relay channel
" '' IEEE Transactions on Information Theory'' (1979), pp. 572–584


External links

* Many resources on the Relay Channel and Cooperative Communications are available a

Information theory Telecommunication theory