mm-NOLOC: mmWave-based Localization for Mobile Networks without 3GPP Location Service
Fecha
2025-10-23Resumen
Accurate localization in dense urban areas remains a significant challenge due to the limitations of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) in environments with obstacles and reflections, such as urban canyons. While the most recent 3GPP standards offer sophisticated network-centric positioning techniques, their widespread deployment will take time and is hindered by high infrastructure costs and complexity. In this work, we present mm-NOLOC, a UE-centric localization system, designed as a practical fallback when GNSS fails to deliver high accuracy, that leverages the growing deployment of 5G mmWave infrastructure in dense urban areas. Unlike traditional approaches, mm-NOLOC operates independently of 3GPP location support and utilizes only standardized control-plane information collected solely on the UE side – Synchronization Signal Block (SSB) Indices that are mapped to 5G mmWave beam directions – to obtain robust position estimations. To address the uncertainty introduced by urban multipath, mm-NOLOC models the SSB-to-angle relationship as a discrete and multimodal distribution, based on empirical measurements in operational 5G mmWave networks, and uses a particle filter to refine position estimates by integrating probabilistic observations with UE-side motion dynamics. We validate mm-NOLOC through experiments over commercial 5G mmWave deployments, as well as trace-based simulations. Our results show that mm-NOLOC achieves a median localization error below 3 m and a 95th percentile error below 10 m, offering a practical fallback localization solution in urban canyon scenarios for 5G networks without network location support.


