Introducing Facebook's new terrestrial connectivity systems — Terragraph and 
Project ARIES

https://code.facebook.com/posts/1072680049445290/introducing-facebook-s-new-terrestrial-connectivity-systems-terragraph-and-project-aries/


While access to high-speed internet varies across the globe, both developing 
and developed economies can suffer from insufficient data rates. Slow internet 
speed is especially prevalent in developing economies where mobile networks are 
often unable to achieve data rates better than 2G. Developed economies are 
hampered by Wi-Fi and LTE infrastructure that is unable to keep up with the 
exponential growth in the consumption of photos and video at higher and higher 
resolutions.

While solutions such as GPON optical fiber can provide 100s of megabits up to 
several gigabits of capacity, the high costs associated with laying the fiber 
makes the goal of ubiquitous gigabit citywide coverage unachievable and 
unaffordable for almost all countries. Similarly, conventional means of 
increasing the capacity of wireless networks, such as licensing more radio 
frequency spectrum or installing more base stations, are costly and difficult 
in both urban and rural areas.

Facebook's Connectivity Lab is working on a range of new technology solutions 
to help connect the unconnected and improve the experience of the underserved. 
Today we announced two new terrestrial systems focused on improving the speed, 
efficiency, and quality of internet connectivity around the world — Terragraph 
and Project ARIES (Antenna Radio Integration for Efficiency in Spectrum).

Terragraph

Terragraph is a 60 GHz, multi-node wireless system focused on bringing 
high-speed internet connectivity to dense urban areas. Utilizing commercial 
off-the-shelf components and leveraging the cloud for intensive data 
processing, the Terragraph system is optimized for high-volume, low-cost 
production.

Delivering gigabits of capacity requires multiple gigahertz of spectrum via 
frequency reuse. Although 60 GHz has traditionally been avoided due to its high 
absorption of oxygen and water, countries such as the United States, United 
Kingdom, Germany, China, South Korea, Japan, and others saw the benefit of 
making this part of the spectrum — also known as “V-band” — unlicensed, similar 
to the Wi-Fi 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands. Up to 7 GHz of bandwidth is available in 
the 60 GHz band, and forward-thinking countries like the United States are 
seeking input to expand this to a total of 14 GHz.

One of the beneficiaries of this decision is WiGig, an enhancement to the Wi-Fi 
standard, designed to provide in-room high-bandwidth communication. 
Terragraph’s wireless system consists of radios that are based on the WiGig 
standard and are designed for consumer electronics, which allowed us to create 
nodes that are inexpensive relative to traditional telecom infrastructure.

Given the limited range of the 60 GHz signal, these nodes are placed across a 
city at 200-250 meter intervals. The vast bandwidth and unique signal-absorbing 
nature of the band limits interference and simplifies network planning, while 
the unlicensed nature of the spectrum helps to further minimize costs. Designed 
to provide street level coverage, Terragraph implements a phase array antenna 
to retain the highly directional signal required for 60 GHz, but makes it 
steerable to communicate over a wide area. Given the architecture of the 
network, Terragraph is able to route and steer around interference typically 
found in dense urban environments, such as tall buildings or internet 
congestion due to high user traffic.

Terragraph also leverages technology created to manage Facebook's massive data 
center infrastructure. We implemented IPv6-only nodes, an SDN-like cloud 
compute controller, and a new modular routing protocol for fast route 
convergence and failure detection. We also re-architected the MAC layer to 
solve the shortcomings of TCP/IP over a wireless link. By implementing a high 
performance TDMA-TDD MAC, we saw up to 6x improvement in network efficiency and 
at the same time made TCP/IP predictable compared to the existing Wi-Fi/WiGig 
standard.

Finally, Terragraph incorporates attributes and industrial design required for 
fast, attractive, and affordable deployment across cityscapes. Its reduced 
interference and ability to operate in non-line-of-sight conditions increases 
customer reach. For customers or business in multi-dwelling units or 
high-rises, the Terragraph system can be externally attached to a building and 
connected to an in-building Ethernet data network. Combined with Wi-Fi access 
points, Terragraph is one of the lowest cost solutions to achieve 100 percent 
street-level coverage of gigabit Wi-Fi.

Project ARIES

Our other focus is on a transmission technology that is a) spectrally efficient 
(total number of bits transmitted per unit of radio spectrum bps/Hz), allowing 
for higher throughput in even the smallest bandwidths, and b) energy efficient 
(total number of bits transmitted per unit Joule energy spent b/J), allowing 
for extended coverage range. Project ARIES is our proof-of-concept effort to 
build a test platform for incredibly efficient usage of spectrum and energy: A 
base station with 96 antennas, it can support 24 streams simultaneously over 
the same radio spectrum. We currently are able to demonstrate 71 bps/Hz of 
spectral efficiency, and when complete ARIES will demonstrate an unprecedented 
100+ bps/Hz of spectral efficiency.

Today, 4G cellular and WLAN systems use a technology called MIMO — multiple 
input, multiple output. The progression toward 5G comes with Massive MIMO, an 
advanced wireless technology that uses a large number of antennas. ARIES is an 
embodiment of such a technology — by using the notion of “spatial 
multiplexing,” the antenna array at the base station can serve a multiplicity 
of autonomous user terminals on the same time-frequency resource. This spatial 
resource sharing policy serves as an alternative not only to the need for 
spectrum licensing, but also the procurement of additional base stations in 
conventional cell-shrinking strategies. Massive MIMO systems with an 
excessively large number of antennas have recently gained attention, thanks to 
asymptotic results on random matrix theory that illustrate how the effects of 
uncorrelated noise and small-scale fading are virtually eliminated as the 
number of antennas in a MIMO cell grows large. 

Massive MIMO systems are also versatile over a wide range of system parameters. 
For instance, the beamforming gain afforded by using a large number of transmit 
antennas may be used to overcome the large path-loss associated with millimeter 
wave links in urban areas. Alternatively, the beamforming gain may be harnessed 
at lower frequencies to provide wide-coverage connectivity to rural areas, and 
this is our focus. Given such promises, the practical and theoretical aspects 
of massive MIMO systems are being examined for potential beyond-4G wireless 
communications deployments by standardization entities such as the third 
generation partnership project (3GPP), and by many industrial base-station and 
device manufacturers worldwide.

Testing and deployment

Terragraph can make an immediate difference to help drive down the cost of 
providing data while giving people a high-quality experience. We're currently 
testing Terragraph at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park and preparing a 
broader trial with the city of San Jose in California. We selected the latter 
for its mix of building types and neighborhoods, its proximity to Menlo Park, 
and the city’s commitment to demonstrating new technologies through the mayor’s 
Smart City Vision. So far, we have demonstrated 1.05 Gbps bidirectional (2.1 
Gbps total throughput per distribution node) in P2P mode, up to 250 meters 
away. This means up to 8.4 Gbps of total traffic per installation point 
assuming 4 sectors, and we think this number can be as high as 12.8 Gbps in the 
future. In P2MP mode, the system is able to autodiscover the location of the 
client nodes, and we have been able to demonstrate electronically beam-forming 
the signals between 2 client nodes in 8 microseconds, or about 125,000 times 
per second.

We'll continue to invest in the program with our partners, building large-scale 
trial networks in multiple markets around the world to demonstrate the 
potential value and efficiency of the technology. We're working on making this 
technology open and interoperable via unlicensed spectrum, just like Wi-Fi 
itself. We hope to allow new types of high bandwidth networks and business 
models for their deployments to be developed. We’ll also continue to iterate on 
Terragraph and determine the best approach to contribute it to TIP (Telecom 
Infra Project) so we can bring its benefits to the wider ecosystem.

For ARIES, we have a working testbed that conclusively demonstrates the 10x 
spectral and energy efficiency gains of 4G cellular with massive MIMO 
technology in point to multi-point deployments. From our recent population 
distribution study across 20 countries, we know that nearly 97 percent of the 
global population lives within 40 kilometers of a major city. As such, we are 
interested in developing this technology to harness the incredible gains in 
providing communications to rural communities from city centers. Additionally, 
providing backhaul to rural environments can be prohibitively expensive, but 
the hope with systems such as these is that costly rural infrastructure can be 
avoided while still providing high-speed connectivity. Moreover, we would like 
to make this technology open to the wireless communications research and 
academic community, so we can help build and improve on the already implemented 
algorithms or devise new ones that will help solve broader connectivity 
challenges of the future. 



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