Description
The Equivalent Spatial Domain (ESD) is a conceptual and mathematical framework employed within 3GPP specifications to define and evaluate the performance of advanced antenna systems (AAS), including MIMO and beamforming, in a standardized and tractable manner. It is not a physical network entity but an analytical tool used primarily in conformance testing specifications (e.g., TS 37.113, 38.113) and radio requirements documents. The ESD model translates the physical characteristics of an antenna array—such as element patterns, positions, and complex weights—into an equivalent representation that describes the system's behavior in the spatial domain (i.e., as a function of azimuth and elevation angles).
Architecturally, the concept is applied to the definition of base station (NodeB, eNB, gNB) and User Equipment (UE) radio requirements. For a device under test (DUT) with an AAS, its actual antenna system is characterized by a set of antenna elements. The ESD approach allows the derivation of an equivalent antenna pattern or an equivalent set of spatial beams that represent the composite effect of the array and its digital signal processing. This is crucial because directly testing every possible beamforming weight combination for a large array is impractical. The ESD provides a reduced-order model that captures the essential spatial properties for the purposes of defining radiated power, sensitivity, and unwanted emission limits.
The methodology works by defining a mapping from the actual antenna array ports to an equivalent set of spatial domain samples or beams. Specifications detail formulas and procedures to calculate the Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (EIRP) or Equivalent Isotropic Sensitivity (EIS) in different spatial directions based on this model. For example, TS 38.113 for NR defines requirements for base station emissions using the ESD concept to specify the power limits for the equivalent beam peak and sidelobes. This involves concepts like the “equivalent array factor” and the application of beamforming weights to element patterns to generate the composite ESD pattern.
Key components of the ESD analysis include the definition of the antenna element radiation pattern, the array geometry, the beamforming weight vectors, and the mapping to the spatial grid. Its role is to enable the specification of performance metrics that are agnostic to the specific internal implementation of the AAS while still ensuring that the device meets essential radio performance, coexistence, and regulatory requirements. It bridges the gap between complex physical antenna systems and the need for clear, testable requirements in 3GPP standards.
Purpose & Motivation
The ESD concept was developed to address the significant challenge of specifying and testing performance for base stations and user equipment employing advanced antenna systems (AAS) with beamforming capabilities. Traditional radio conformance tests were designed for single-antenna or simple diversity antennas, where conducted testing at the antenna port was sufficient. With the advent of MIMO and massive MIMO, where performance is intrinsically spatial and depends on digital beamforming, a new methodology was required.
Historically, starting in 3GPP Rel-4 with initial MIMO studies for UMTS, and evolving through LTE and 5G NR, the complexity of antenna systems increased dramatically. The purpose of defining the Equivalent Spatial Domain was to create a standardized, implementation-independent framework for defining radiated requirements. It solves the problem of how to write a technical specification that applies equally to a vendor using a 64-element rectangular array and another using a 32-element circular array, as long as their equivalent spatial behavior meets the same criteria.
This approach was motivated by the need for fairness in certification, practicality in testing, and alignment with regulatory requirements for spurious emissions and radiated power. Without the ESD model, it would be impossible to define unambiguous Over-the-Air (OTA) test requirements for beamforming devices. It allows 3GPP to specify critical performance aspects like total radiated power (TRP), effective isotropic sensitivity (EIS), and spatial emission masks in a way that reflects the real-world beam-steering operation of modern radios, thus ensuring network performance and spectral efficiency while maintaining compliance with international radio regulations.
Key Features
- Provides an equivalent spatial representation of complex antenna arrays and beamforming
- Enables the definition of radiated performance requirements (EIRP, EIS) for AAS
- Foundation for Over-the-Air (OTA) testing methodologies in 3GPP
- Implementation-agnostic, focusing on external spatial behavior rather than internal architecture
- Used to model beam patterns, sidelobes, and spatial correlation for conformance testing
- Applicable across multiple radio access technologies (UTRAN, E-UTRAN, NG-RAN)
Evolution Across Releases
Introduced the Equivalent Spatial Domain (ESD) concept within the context of UMTS/UTRAN requirements. The initial application focused on modeling and specifying performance for base station antenna arrays, particularly for defining spurious emissions and conducted requirements in a way that could account for multi-antenna configurations, laying the groundwork for future MIMO specifications.
Defining Specifications
| Specification | Title |
|---|---|
| TS 21.905 | 3GPP TS 21.905 |
| TS 25.113 | 3GPP TS 25.113 |
| TS 26.118 | 3GPP TS 26.118 |
| TS 26.818 | 3GPP TS 26.818 |
| TS 34.124 | 3GPP TR 34.124 |
| TS 36.113 | 3GPP TR 36.113 |
| TS 36.124 | 3GPP TR 36.124 |
| TS 37.113 | 3GPP TR 37.113 |
| TS 38.113 | 3GPP TR 38.113 |
| TS 38.124 | 3GPP TR 38.124 |
| TS 38.175 | 3GPP TR 38.175 |
| TS 38.809 | 3GPP TR 38.809 |