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Название: Shaping Future 6G Networks

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Отраслевые издания

Серия:

isbn: 9781119765530

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ efficiency and reduced complexity are in the control plane, not the data plane, relying for that on machine learning and automation technologies as detailed in this book. However, since 6G will serve as infrastructure, with concomitant reliability expectations, robustness, predictability and explainability of any use of machine learning will be more important than squeezing out the last percentage points of efficiency.

      Despite all the changes in technology, the common thread across mobile technology generations has been a dramatic reduction in the consumer unit cost of mobile data, with new applications enabled simply because they became affordable. Thus, 6G will likely only offer a significant value proposition beyond a marketing tag line if it is engineered to minimize operational complexity, maximizes operational automation and ensures high availability. The Wi‐Fi experience can offer lessons and might even offer an opportunity for convergence, where 6G radio access is just another PHY, with a common upper‐layer stack optimized for a heterogeneous service provider environment that allows a wide variety of industry, academic and government users to rapidly and cheaply create new applications and an even wider variety of entities to offer access to network services. Deciding what to omit from 6G and leave it to other parts of the networking eco system will be as important as deciding what to include.

      Research, particularly academic research, should be driven by the urgent needs of society, not just supplying patent‐protected “moats” against competition, whether between companies or nations. 6G offers a unique opportunity to the research community to identify the best engineering approaches that enable universal, affordable, secure and reliable networks. This book provides an initial and valuable exploration of these questions.

      Henning Schulzrinne

      Columbia University, USA

      Peter Stuckmann, Head of Unit, Future Connectivity Systems, European Commission

      Recent years and in particular the COVID‐19 crisis have shown us the importance of resilient and high‐speed communications infrastructure. Trust and acceptance in connectivity infrastructure has grown as global societies have discovered its added value and the possibilities for remote working, but also for citizens’ daily lives. Business has understood the critical importance of high‐speed networks and technologies in maintaining operations and processes. The crisis illustrates both the potential that 5G networks have to provide the connectivity basis for the digital and green recovery in the short to mid‐term, and the need to build technology capacities for the following generation – 6G – in the long term.

      R&I initiatives on 6G technologies are now starting in leading regions world‐wide, with the first products and infrastructures expected for the end of this decade. 6G systems are expected to offer a new step change in performance from Gigabit towards Terabit capacities and sub‐millisecond response times, to enable new critical applications such as real‐time automation or extended reality (“Internet of Senses”) collecting and providing the sensor data for nothing less than a digital twin of the physical world.

      Moreover, new smart network technologies and architectures will be needed to enhance drastically the energy efficiency of connectivity platforms despite major traffic growth and keep electromagnetic fields (EMF) under safety limits. They will form the technology base for a human‐centric Next‐Generation Internet (NGI) and address Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) such as accessibility and affordability of technology.

      Firstly, success in 6G will depend on the extent regions will succeed in building a solid 5G infrastructure, on which 6G technology experiments and, later, 6G deployments can build. In this context, building 5G ecosystems will be of key importance, also because industry R&I investments tend to relocate where markets are more advanced.

      One important success factor to create and seize such opportunities is to be a standard setter in 6G and the related technology fields. Both future users and suppliers need to shape key technology standards in the field of radio communications, but also in next‐generation network architecture to ensure the delivery of advanced service features, e.g. through the effective use of software technologies and open interfaces, while meeting energy‐efficiency requirements.

      Spectrum resources are another key factor that will determine success in 6G. Whereas bands currently allocated for mobile communications will be reused for 6G, new frequency bands will be identified and harmonised. Industry and governments need to identify the opportunities related to spectrum that can be suitable for 6G and be made available with the potential to be harmonised at global level. 6G technology will also have the potential to make a further step towards a multi‐purpose service platform replacing legacy radio services for dedicated applications. This could help the progress in defragmenting the radio spectrum and drastically enhance spectrum efficiency that will in turn free up new bands for 6G or other purposes.

      Such outcomes in global standardisation and spectrum harmonisation need to be prepared by proactive and effective international cooperation at government and industry‐level. This includes regular dialogues with leading regions and possible focused joint initiatives in R&I, standardisation or regulation.

      I am looking forward to the creativity and ambition of the global research and innovation community to shape the new generation of communication technology throughout this decade.

      Let’s kick this off!

      Peter Stuckmann

      Head of Unit, Future Connectivity Systems, European Commission

      Notes

      1 1 McKinsey Global Institute, 2/2020, Connected World – An evolution in connectivity beyond the 5G revolution

      2 2 More open and interoperable interfaces СКАЧАТЬ