Covariance-Aware Demapping on Fourier-Curve Constellations
Abstract
Injecting artificial noise (AN) along the tangent space of a curved constellation makes each transmitted symbol induce a Gaussian observation with a symbol-dependent rank-one covariance, so the matched maximum-likelihood (ML) decoder differs from the Euclidean nearest-neighbor decoder by a single rank-one correction per candidate. We develop a baseband-demapper realization of this correction for the Fourier-curve constellation and instantiate a regular (3,6) low-density parity-check (LDPC)-coded link at (k,M)=(20,64). Against four baselines (Euclidean-mismatched, flat-constellation isotropic-AN, no-AN, and same-spectral-efficiency narrowband), the matched decoder extends the BLER=10-1 operating range by approximately 5\,dB over the Euclidean-mismatched counterpart on the same tangent-AN transmitter, at a cost of 2kM additional multiply-accumulate operations per symbol (+50\%/+100\% under residual/template-correlation accounting) and a 20\,KB constellation--tangent lookup table (10\,KB incremental over a Euclidean template-only LUT). A bit-interleaved coded-modulation achievable-rate (BICM-AIR) computation supports the same matched-metric advantage at the tested labeling and max-log demapper, indicating that the BLER gain is not merely an artifact of this particular LDPC simulation, and a Woodbury extension generalizes the rank-one correction to per-tone Ricean fading. In the tested Monte-Carlo runs, a design-aware bounded-search eavesdropper without the phase-key shows no successful LDPC decoding at any tested k∈\2,8,20\ within a B=103 non-code-aided search budget; code-aided, multi-frame, and known-preamble attacks are left to follow-up work. LUT quantization down to 6 bits yields no measurable coded-BLER degradation at the tested operating points.
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