This application claims the benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 2004-47147 filed on Jun. 23, 2004, in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present general inventive concept relates to a digital receiver system. More particularly, the present general inventive concept relates to a carrier frequency offset detecting apparatus in a digital receiver system, and a detecting method thereof.
2. Description of the Related Art
In a vestigial sideband (VSB) transmission mode which is one of several digital signal transmission modes, a pilot tone is inserted into a frequency domain of a VSB signal, and a receiver performs a timing recovery and a carrier recovery by using this inserted pilot tone.
Also, the receiver is capable of compensating a carrier frequency offset by extracting the pilot tone inserted into the received signal using a carrier frequency recovery circuit, such as a frequency phase locked loop (FPLL).
If a frequency error of an input signal is a positive value, the AFC LPF 10 changes a phase of the input signal by −90°. Conversely, if the frequency error of the input signal is a negative value, the AFC LPF 10 changes the phase of the input signal by +90°. Also, as shown in the third waveform from the left side, for an input of a sine wave to an imaginary part (I) and a real part (Q), the change in the phase of the input signal of the AFC LPF 10 is determined by the frequency error. Hence, a low-pass filtering is carried out at the AFC LPF 10, so that an output signal has a DC component in proportion to the frequency error.
As a result of the DC component acquisition, the VCO 50 increases a free drive frequency value by an amount of the DC component proportional to the frequency error, and the frequency value output from the VOC is then multiplied with signals respectively from the imaginary part (I) and from the real part (Q) of the original input signal of the carrier frequency recovery circuit through the use of multipliers 70 and 80, thereby correcting the frequency error. After the correction of the frequency error, a phase correction is carried out in accordance with a phase characteristic of an output value of the APC LPF 40 illustrated in
The above described carrier frequency recovery method using the pilot tone provides an adequate performance result in case that the pilot tone is completely recovered. However, there may be a problem that the carrier frequency cannot be recovered when the pilot tone is damaged due to poor channel environments caused by several factors such as a multipath generated at a transmission channel. Also, when an intention is to broaden a compensation range of the carrier frequency offset, an amount of a remaining offset after the compensation may still be high, and if it is intended to decrease the amount of the remaining offset, the compensation range may be narrowed.
Accordingly, the present general inventive concept provides a carrier frequency offset detecting apparatus to detect a carrier frequency offset regardless of a symbol timing offset by using a cross correlation value with a non-coherent channel profile in a digital receiver system, and a carrier frequency offset detecting method thereof.
Additional aspects and advantages of the present general inventive concept will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the general inventive concept.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and advantages of the present general inventive concept may be achieved by providing an apparatus to detect a carrier frequency offset, including a plurality of correlators to calculate individual correlation values by employing pseudo-noise (PN) sequences classified into a predetermined number of sub-sequences with respect to an input signal; at least one conjugate signal generation unit to input individual output values of the correlators and then to generate a conjugate complex number for each of the input values; at least one multiplier to multiply the individual conjugate complex numbers output from the at least one conjugate signal generation unit with the individual output values of the correlators that do not input the correlation values to the at least one conjugate signal generation unit; an adder to add output values of at least one multiplier; and a phase extractor to extract a phase component from an output value of the adder and to output the phase component as a carrier frequency offset.
The output value of the adder can be defined in accordance with an equation as
where r(n) is an input signal and p(n) is the PN sequence classified into the predetermined number of sub-sequences.
Also, the input signal can be defined as follows
ri(n)=pi(n)ej(θ
The plurality of correlators can calculate the correlation values by using the predetermined number of sub-sequences classified from the PN sequences and defined in accordance with an equation as
p(n)=(p1(n1), p2(n2), . . . , pn(nN)
1≦n≦M
1≦ni≦K(i=1, 2, . . . , N)
where p(n) is the PN subsequence classified into the predetermined number of sub-sequences.
The phase component extracted from the phase extractor can be defined in accordance with an equation as:
where CFO is the carrier frequency offset.
The phase extractor can also extract the phase component from a vector summation of the output values of the adder for paths exceeding a predetermined threshold value by employing a channel profile based on a non-coherent correlation value obtained by using the correlation values outputted from the plurality of correlators.
The phase extractor can extract the phase component from the output value of the adder corresponding to a main path by employing a channel profile based on a non-coherent correlation value obtained by using the correlation values output from the plurality of correlators.
The non-coherent correlation value can be defined in accordance with an equation as
where p(k) is the PN sequence classified into the predetermined number of sub-sequences and r(k) is the input signal.
The foregoing and/or other aspects and advantages of the present general inventive concept may also be achieved by providing a method of detecting a carrier frequency offset, including calculating individual correlation values by employing PN sequences classified into a predetermined number of sub-sequences with respect to an input signal; generating individual conjugate complex numbers for the individual correlation values output from distally disposed parts among the calculated correlation values; multiplying the individual conjugate complex numbers with the individual correlation values outputted from proximally disposed parts among the calculated correlation values; adding the multiplied values, thereby obtaining a cross correlation value; and extracting a phase component from the cross correlation value and outputting the phase component as a carrier frequency offset.
Accordingly, the carrier frequency offset can be detected even when a pilot signal cannot be detected due to a poor channel environment.
These and/or other aspects and advantages of the present general inventive concept will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Hereinafter, the present general inventive concept will be described in detail with reference to illustrative accompanying drawings.
In the following description, same drawing reference numerals are used for the same elements even in different drawings. The matters defined in the description such as a detailed construction and elements are nothing but the ones provided to assist in a comprehensive understanding of the general inventive concept. Thus, it is apparent that the present general inventive concept can be carried out without those defined matters. Also, well-known functions or constructions are not described in detail since they would obscure the general inventive concept in unnecessary detail.
The first correlator 110-1 through the N-th correlator 110-N receive a field synchronization signal of a sampled input signal and calculate non-coherent correlation values. The non-coherent correlation values will be described later in greater detail.
The first conjugate signal generation unit 120-1 through the (N−1)-th conjugate signal generation unit 120-(N−1) are connected respectively with the first correlator 110-1 through the (N−1)-th correlator 110-(N−1) and, generate conjugate complex numbers corresponding to output signals of the first correlator 110 through the (N−1)-th correlator 110-(N−1).
The second multiplier 130-2 through the N-th multiplier 130-N multiply each of the output signals received from the correlators, i.e., the second correlator 110-2 through the N-th correlator 110-N, with each of the output signals from the first conjugate generation unit 120-1 through the (N−1)-th conjugate signal generation unit 120-(N−1), respectively.
The adder 140 adds the output signals of the second multiplier 130-2 through the N-th multiplier 130-N and calculates a cross correlation value. The cross correlation value will be described later.
The phase extraction unit 150 extracts a phase component, which is a carrier frequency offset, from an output value of the adder 140. Therefore, it is possible to detect the carrier frequency offset regardless of a symbol timing offset on the basis of the cross correlation and the non-coherent channel profile of the received field synchronization signal.
Meanwhile, when the calculated non-coherent correlation values become maximum, that is, on the basis of a main path, the phase component corresponding to the carrier frequency offset is extracted, or vectors of the cross correlation values are added which are determined to be greater than a predetermined threshold value. Then, a carrier frequency offset value corresponding to the added vector values is detected, thereby resulting in a highly accurate detection of the carrier frequency offset.
With reference to
In the field synchronization signal, M PN sequences classified into the N number of sub-sequences are expressed by Equation 1 as provided below:
p(n)=(p1(n1), p2(n2), . . . , pn(nN)
1≦n≦M
1≦ni≦K(i=1, 2, . . . , N) Equation 1
where p(n) is the PN sequence classified into the N number of sub-sequences.
The input signal “r(k)” is defined by Equation 2 as provided below:
ri(n)=pi(n)ej(θ
Therefore, the first correlator 110-1 through the N-th correlator 110-N obtain the correlation values with respect to the input signal “r(k)” through the use of the sub-sequences “P(n).” The calculated correlation value is expressed by Equation 3 as provided below:
Each of the first conjugate signal generation unit 120-1 through the (N−1)-th conjugate signal generation unit 120-(N−1) generate conjugate complex numbers for each of the correlation values calculated by the first correlator 110-1 through the (N−1)-th correlator 110-(N−1) connected with the first conjugate signal generation unit 120-1 through the (N−1)-th conjugate signal generation unit 120-(N−1), respectively (operation S230).
The second multiplier 130-2 through the N-th multiplier 130-N, respectively, multiply the above generated conjugate complex numbers calculated by the first conjugate signal generation unit 120-1 through the (N−1)-th conjugate signal generation unit 120-(N−1) with the correlation values calculated by the second correlator 110-2 through the N-th correlator 110-N. The adder 140 then performs a cumulative addition of the multiplication values obtained from the second multiplier 130-2 through the N-th multiplier 130-N, thereby obtaining a cross correlation value “C” defined by Equation 4 as provided below (operation S240):
where p(n) is the PN sequence classified into the N number of sub-sequences.
The phase extraction unit 150 extracts a phase component from the cross correlation value calculated by the adder 140 (operation S250). As mentioned above, the phase component corresponds to the carrier frequency offset. The cross correlation value output from the adder 140 is the correlation value of the conjugate complex numbers. The carrier frequency offset “CFO” calculated based on the cross correlation value is defined by Equation 5 as follows:
That is, the carrier frequency offset “CFO” becomes a phase component “Kθ” of the cross correlation value.
Meanwhile, the moment of extrapolating the carrier frequency offset is when a channel profile value obtained through a partial non-coherent correlation operation becomes maximum. That is, the carrier frequency offset can be derived from calculating the cross correlation value on the basis of the main path. The partial non-coherent correlation operation can be expressed by Equation 6 provided below. Also, as illustrated in
where p(k) is the PN sequence classified into the N number of sub-sequences and r(k) is the input signal.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present general inventive concept, the carrier frequency offset is detected by using the cross correlation value of the field synchronization signal and the non-coherent channel profile regardless of the symbol timing recovery. Hence, it is advantageous that performance of a fine carrier frequency offset recovery connected to a rear terminal of the carrier frequency offset detecting apparatus is improved.
Also, the carrier frequency offset correction of a vestigial sideband signal is generally carried out by using a pilot signal. However, it is impossible to correct the carrier frequency offset when the pilot signal is damaged by a poor channel environment, and as a result, it is further impossible to receive a signal. In contrast, since a pilot signal is not employed in the present general inventive concept, the carrier frequency offset can be detected even in a poor channel environment.
Moreover, the channel profile can be read with high accuracy on the basis of the correlation values calculated through employing the PN sequences of the field synchronization signal, and thus, the carrier frequency offset detection apparatus can be normally operated even in a poor channel environment. The carrier frequency offset detection in accordance with an embodiment of the present general inventive concept is not affected by the symbol timing offset since the carrier frequency offset is detected through the vector summation of the cross correlation values at the moment when a channel profile that exceeds a predetermined threshold value at the non-coherent channel profile is generated.
The carrier frequency offset detecting apparatus of
Although a few embodiments of the present general inventive concept have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in these embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the general inventive concept, the scope of which is defined in the appended claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-47147 | Jun 2004 | KR | national |