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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: He, Jiajun, Yu, Han, Guo, Yiran, Yi, Xinping, Liu, Fan, So, Hing Cheung, Ngo, Hien Quoc, Matthaiou, Michail, Caire, Giuseppe
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20993
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author He, Jiajun
Yu, Han
Guo, Yiran
Yi, Xinping
Liu, Fan
So, Hing Cheung
Ngo, Hien Quoc
Matthaiou, Michail
Caire, Giuseppe
author_facet He, Jiajun
Yu, Han
Guo, Yiran
Yi, Xinping
Liu, Fan
So, Hing Cheung
Ngo, Hien Quoc
Matthaiou, Michail
Caire, Giuseppe
contents Low-altitude wireless networks (LAWNs) are expected to consist of multi-tier, heterogeneous terrestrial and non-terrestrial devices, where effective coordination is essential to fully unlock the complementary capabilities of diverse systems from different vendors. To address this issue, we propose a novel multi-functional coordination framework that enables seamless cooperation within the LAWN while supporting efficient execution of diverse network functions. In the proposed architecture, each device or infrastructure element is assigned to a specific functional role, namely, edge mobile terminal (E-MT), distributed MT (D-MT), or computing center. E-MTs are equipped with lightweight, independent signal processing and computing capabilities, while D-MTs and the computing center handle regional and global coordination, respectively. To enhance the overall network efficiency, we model the LAWN as a sparse graph, where nodes represent network nodes and edges are defined according to a set of controllable connection rules. This topology-aware (TA) representation allows for efficiently solving various coordination tasks across the network. Numerical results show that the proposed TA coordination framework outperforms baseline approaches that lack topological insights, achieving higher efficiency in multi-task coordination. Finally, we discuss key technical challenges and outline potential solutions for future deployment.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_20993
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Topology-Aware Coordination for Multi-Functional Low-Altitude Wireless Networks
He, Jiajun
Yu, Han
Guo, Yiran
Yi, Xinping
Liu, Fan
So, Hing Cheung
Ngo, Hien Quoc
Matthaiou, Michail
Caire, Giuseppe
Information Theory
Low-altitude wireless networks (LAWNs) are expected to consist of multi-tier, heterogeneous terrestrial and non-terrestrial devices, where effective coordination is essential to fully unlock the complementary capabilities of diverse systems from different vendors. To address this issue, we propose a novel multi-functional coordination framework that enables seamless cooperation within the LAWN while supporting efficient execution of diverse network functions. In the proposed architecture, each device or infrastructure element is assigned to a specific functional role, namely, edge mobile terminal (E-MT), distributed MT (D-MT), or computing center. E-MTs are equipped with lightweight, independent signal processing and computing capabilities, while D-MTs and the computing center handle regional and global coordination, respectively. To enhance the overall network efficiency, we model the LAWN as a sparse graph, where nodes represent network nodes and edges are defined according to a set of controllable connection rules. This topology-aware (TA) representation allows for efficiently solving various coordination tasks across the network. Numerical results show that the proposed TA coordination framework outperforms baseline approaches that lack topological insights, achieving higher efficiency in multi-task coordination. Finally, we discuss key technical challenges and outline potential solutions for future deployment.
title Topology-Aware Coordination for Multi-Functional Low-Altitude Wireless Networks
topic Information Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20993