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Introduction to Massive MIMO and MUI In a massive MIMO system, a base station is equipped with a large number of antennas \( M \), typically in the order of 100 or more. This system simultaneously serves \( K \) users, each with a single antenna. The key advantage of massive MIMO is the ability to exploit spatial diversity, which allows for significant gains in both signal quality and interference suppression. The signal model in massive MIMO can be described as follows: \( y = \sum_{i=1}^K \sqrt{p_u} g_i x_i + n \) where: \( y \) is the received signal vector. \( p_u \) is the power allocated to each user. \( g_i \) is the channel vector of user \( i \), modeled as a complex Gaussian random vector. \( x_i \) is the transmitted symbol by user \( i \). \( n \) is the noise vector, typically modeled as a complex Gaussian with zero mean and identity covariance, \( \mathcal{CN}(0, I) \). ...