The present invention relates to the timing and synchronization function of a remodulator system.
High definition television (HDTV) broadcast standards are defined by the Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC) of the “Digital HDTV Alliance” formed by U.S. television vendors. The ATSC A/53 Digital Television Standard states that equipment used for transmitting HDTV signals requires a timing accuracy of 10 ppm. Consumer electronic devices such as Digital Video Disc (DVD) players which will be used in conjunction with a digital television receiver therefore require a clock or timebase signal of similar accuracy, the clock signal typically being supplied by an internal stand alone reference oscillator. The cost and complexity of such an oscillator is a significant contributor to the total cost of the completed device.
Multivalue symbol vestigial sideband (VSB) modulation in accordance with the ATSC standard is a known modulation method for digitally transmitting information data such as HDTV signals. The recovery of data from the transmitted VSB signal containing digital video and related information at a digital receiver inherently requires the implementation of three functions: timing recovery for symbol synchronization, carrier recovery (frequency demodulation) and equalization. Timing recovery is the process by which the receiver clock (timebase) is synchronized to the transmitter clock by decoding the timing signal which is embedded in the transmitted VSB signal.
An example of a device to perform this function is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,943,369, entitled TIMING RECOVERY SYSTEM FOR A DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSOR, issued Aug. 24, 1999 to Knutson et al. A device for receiving quadrature amplitude modulated signals representing successive symbols is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,878,088, entitled DIGITAL VARIABLE SYMBOL TIMING RECOVERY SYSTEM FOR QAM, issued Mar. 2, 1999, issued to Knutson et al. The accuracy of the recovered timing signal is substantially equivalent to the accuracy of the transmitted VSB timing signal.
In accordance with the principles of the present invention, an accurate timing reference is derived from a broadcast VSB channel. In a consumer electronics context, for example, the reception and demodulation of the broadcast signal is performed by receiver circuitry within a digital image producing device such as a DVD player or Video Cassette Recorder (VCR). The VCR is tuned to a broadcast television channel containing the embedded symbol timing information and the symbol timing sequence or tone is decoded. The resulting timing information is sent to the VCR remodulator which uses the timing signal as the source for clock pulses or clock synchronization, thereby eliminating the need for a separate high accuracy reference oscillator within the VCR remodulator. During playback of a tape within the VCR, the VCR receiver is operating to provide the remodulator clock pulses needed to send digitized video information from the VCR to a suitable video display device, such as a digital television receiver.
In normal operation, the VCR receiver will operate continuously during the entire playback period to provide the necessary clock pulses to the remodulator in real time. In the absence of a broadcast signal, the VCR receiver may operate only to detect the broadcast timing signal during an initial acquisition or “pull-in” period.
Once the timing signal has been acquired, the control signal to the variable oscillator of the phase locked loop (PLL) could be frozen to approximate the required clock accuracy without the need for continuous reception of the broadcast VSB signal.
The broadcast VSB signal 5 is coupled to a VSB receiver 30 which includes a variable frequency oscillator (VFO) 32 and a demodulator 31. Specifically, the VSB signal 5 contains a 10.76 MHz (or its second harmonic 21.52 MHz) clock signal 15 which, according to the relevant ATSC specification is accurate to within ten parts per million (for the 10.76 MHz signal). VFO 32 has a center frequency of 10.76 MHz but is accurate only to within one-hundred ppm.
The VFO 32 may be an analog device utilizing a crystal controlled oscillator, it may be a voltage controlled oscillator receiving the correction signal 34 as a series of purely digital increments, or it may be a numerically controlled oscillator which controls clock enable signals and interpolators (discrete time sample rate converters) at the desired rate. An independent PLL could also be used which locks to the clock signal recovered from an independent receiver symbol timing recovery loop.
The demodulator 31 includes a phase locked loop (PLL) 33 which receives a reference clock signal 15 from the VSB signal 5, and generates an output clock signal CLOCK 35 having a desired frequency. The PLL 33 is coupled to and capable of adjusting the frequency of VFO 32 by generating a correction signal 34. The output signal 36 of VFO 32 is coupled to the PLL 33 and compared to the VSB signal 15 to verify the accuracy of VFO 32. When driven by an ATSC VSB signal, the PLL 33 generates a CLOCK 35 signal having an accuracy of within 10 ppm, otherwise the accuracy of the CLOCK 35 signal is within the 100 ppm accuracy of the VFO 32.
In this embodiment, the effect of an outage of the received VSB signal 5 is minimized by introducing a VFO 320 control value 340 equal to the average recent locked value of the loop filter 301 output 306. Multiplexer 304 is switched automatically to the value stored in register 303 when the VSB signal 5 is absent or of poor quality. The register 303, in turn, receives control values from the loop filter 310 and maintains a running average of those values for a predetermined time interval. The insertion of the average value 307 obtained from register 303 will minimize the open loop output frequency change of VFO 320 for brief periods of VSB signal loss.
Referring again to
The primary purpose of PLL 33 is to provide an accurate time reference for the operation of the system illustrated in
The receiver 30 not only generates the timing signal 35 from the broadcast VSB signal 5, but the demodulator 31 also recovers whatever digital video, audio and data stream 45 was contained within the broadcast signal 5. The recovered data stream 45 is coupled to an input of source selector 50. The selected output signal 55 of source selector 50 may be coupled to the input terminal of VSB remodulator 40. The remodulator 40 serves to reconstruct the data stream 45 as appropriate to 8 value and 16 value VSB modulation signals 60, the signals 60 being coupled to the input of the digital television 25 for video and audio play.
Other inputs to the source selector 50 can include a VSB packet source 65 such as videotape player, computer, satellite receiver, data cable, stereo decoder or DVD player. An additional input could be OSD source 70 for the display of menu and status information on the television 25.
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO 0150757 | Jul 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030099317 A1 | May 2003 | US |