Monostatic ISAC Without Full Buffers: Revisiting Spatial Trade-Offs Under Bursty Traffic
Paper in proceeding, 2026

This work investigates the spatial trade-offs arising from the design of the transmit beamformer in a monostatic integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) base station (BS) under bursty traffic, a crucial aspect necessitated by the integration of communication and sensing functionalities in next-generation wireless systems. In this setting, the BS does not always have data available for transmission. This study compares different ISAC policies and reveals the presence of multiple effects influencing ISAC performance: signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) boosting of data-aided strategies compared to pilot-based ones, saturation of the probability of detection in data-aided strategies due to the non-full-buffer assumption, and, finally, directional masking of sensing targets due to the relative position between target and user. Simulation results demonstrate varying impact of these effects on ISAC trade-offs under different operating conditions, thus guiding the design of efficient ISAC transmission strategies.

Monostatic ISAC

spatial tradeoffs

precoder design

bursty traffic

Author

Mauro Marchese

University of Pavia

Musa Furkan Keskin

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Communication, Antennas and Optical Networks

Pietro Savazzi

Consorzio Nazionale Interuniversitario per le Telecomunicazioni (CNIT)

University of Pavia

Henk Wymeersch

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Communication, Antennas and Optical Networks

6th IEEE International Symposium on Joint Communications & Sensing

6th IEEE International Symposium on Joint Communications & Sensing
Ponte di Legno, Italy,

6G DISAC

European Commission (EC) (101139130-6G-DISAC), 2024-01-01 -- 2026-12-31.

Localization and Sensing for Perceptive Cell-Free Networks Towards 6G

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2024-04390), 2025-01-01 -- 2028-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

Communication Systems

Signal Processing

More information

Latest update

1/26/2026