I. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to data communication, and more specifically to techniques for estimating the response of a wireless channel in a communication system with multiple subbands, such as an orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) system.
II. Background
Wireless communication systems are widely deployed to provide various types of communication such as voice, packet data, and so on. These systems may be multiple-access systems capable of supporting communication with multiple users by sharing the available system resources. Examples of such multiple-access systems include code division multiple access (CDMA) systems, time division multiple access (TDMA) systems, and orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA) systems.
OFDM effectively partitions the overall system bandwidth into a number of (N) orthogonal subbands. These subbands are also referred to as tones, frequency bins, and frequency subchannels. With OFDM, each subband is associated with a respective subcarrier upon which data may be modulated. Each subband may thus be viewed as an independent transmission channel that may be used to transmit data.
In a wireless communication system, an RF modulated signal from a transmitter may reach a receiver via a number of propagation paths. For an OFDM system, the N subbands may experience different effective channels due to different effects of fading and multipath and may consequently be associated with different complex channel gains.
An accurate estimate of the response of the wireless channel between the transmitter and the receiver is normally needed in order to effectively transmit data on the available subbands. Channel estimation is typically performed by sending a pilot from the transmitter and measuring the pilot at the receiver. Since the pilot is made up of symbols that are known a priori by the receiver, the channel response can be estimated as the ratio of the received pilot symbol over the transmitted pilot symbol for each subband used for pilot transmission.
Pilot transmission represents overhead in the OFDM system. Thus, it is desirable to minimize pilot transmission to the extent possible. However, because of noise and other artifacts in the wireless channel, a sufficient amount of pilot needs to be transmitted in order for the receiver to obtain a reasonably accurate estimate of the channel response. Moreover, the pilot transmissions need to be repeated to account for variations in the channel over time due to fading and changes in the multipath constituents. Consequently, channel estimation for an OFDM system normally consumes a noticeable portion of the system resources.
In the downlink of a wireless communication system, a single pilot transmission from an access point (or a base station) can be used by a number of terminals to estimate the response of the distinct downlink channels from the access point to each of the terminals. However, in the uplink, each terminal needs to send a pilot transmission separately in order to enable the access point to estimate the uplink channel from the terminal to the access point. Consequently, the overhead due to pilot transmissions is exacerbated due to uplink pilot transmissions.
There is therefore a need in the art for techniques to more efficiently estimate the channel response in an OFDM system, particularly in the uplink.
Techniques are provided herein to estimate the frequency response of a wireless channel in a communication system with multiple subbands (e.g., an OFDM system). It is recognized that the impulse response of the wireless channel can be characterized by L taps, where L is typically much less than the N total subbands in the OFDM system. Because only L taps is needed for the channel impulse response, the frequency response of the wireless channel lies in a subspace of dimension L (instead of N) and may be fully characterized based on the channel gains for as few as L appropriately selected subbands (instead of all N subbands). Moreover, even when more than L channel gains are available, the property described above may be used to obtain an enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel by suppressing the noise components outside this subspace, as described below.
In one embodiment, a method is provided for estimating the frequency response of the wireless channel (e.g., in the OFDM system). In accordance with the method, an initial estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel is obtained for a first group of subbands based on a pilot transmission received via the subbands in the first group. The first group may include all or only a subset of the subbands usable for data transmission. An estimate of the impulse response of the wireless channel is then derived based on the initial frequency response estimate and a first discrete Fourier transform (DFT) matrix for the subbands in the first group. The impulse response estimate may be derived as a least square estimate, as described below. An enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel is then derived for a second group of subbands based on the impulse response estimate and a second DFT matrix for the subbands in the second group. The second group may include all or a subset of the usable subbands, and would include at least one additional subband not included in the first group if this first group does not include all usable subbands.
Various aspects and embodiments of the invention are described in further detail below.
The features, nature, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the detailed description set forth below when taken in conjunction with the drawings in which like reference characters identify correspondingly throughout and wherein:
The channel estimation techniques described herein may be used for any communication system with multiple subbands. For clarity, these techniques are described for an OFDM system.
For OFDM, the data to be transmitted on each subband is first modulated (i.e., symbol mapped) using a particular modulation scheme selected for use for that subband. The signal value is set to zero for each of the N-M unused subbands. For each symbol period, the N symbols (i.e., the M modulation symbols and N-M zeros) are transformed to the time domain using an inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT) to obtain a “transformed” symbol that includes N time-domain samples. The duration of each transformed symbol is inversely related to the bandwidth of each subband. For example, if the system bandwidth is W=20 MHz and N=256, then the bandwidth of each subband is 78.125 KHz (or W/N MHz) and the duration of each transformed symbol is 12.8 μsec (or N/W μsec).
OFDM can provide certain advantages, such as the ability to combat frequency selective fading, which is characterized by different channel gains at different frequencies of the overall system bandwidth. It is well known that frequency selective fading is accompanied by inter-symbol interference (ISI), which is a phenomenon whereby each symbol in a received signal acts as distortion to subsequent symbols in the received signal. The ISI distortion degrades performance by impacting the ability to correctly detect the received symbols. Frequency selective fading can be conveniently combated with OFDM by repeating a portion of (or appending a cyclic prefix to) each transformed symbol to form a corresponding OFDM symbol, which is then transmitted over a wireless channel.
The length of the cyclic prefix (i.e., the amount to repeat) for each OFDM symbol is dependent on the delay spread of the system. The delay spread for a given transmitter is the difference between the earliest and latest arriving signal instances at a receiver for a signal transmitted by the transmitter. The delay spread of the system is the expected worst-case delay spread for all terminals in the system. To effectively combat ISI, the cyclic prefix should be longer than the delay spread of the system.
Each transformed symbol has a duration of N sample periods, where each sample period has a duration of (1/W) μsec. The cyclic prefix may be defined to include Cp samples, where Cp is a suitable integer selected based on the delay spread of the system. In particular, Cp is selected to be greater than or equal to the number of taps (L) for the impulse response of the wireless channel (i.e., Cp≧L). In this case, each OFDM symbol would include N+Cp samples, and each symbol period would span N+Cp sample periods.
The N subbands of the OFDM system may experience different channel conditions (i.e., different effects due to fading and multipath) and may be associated with different complex channel gains. An accurate estimate of the channel response is normally needed in order to properly process (e.g., decode and demodulate) data at the receiver.
The wireless channel in the OFDM system may be characterized by either a time-domain channel impulse response, h, or a corresponding frequency-domain channel frequency response, H. The channel frequency response H is the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) of the channel impulse response h. This relationship may be expressed in matrix form, as follows:
H=Wh Eq (1)
where
The vector h includes one non-zero entry for each tap of the channel impulse response. Thus, if the channel impulse response includes L taps, where L<N, then the first L entries of the vector h would be L non-zero values and the (N−L) following entries would be zeros. However, the techniques described herein apply equally even if the L non-zero values are some arbitrary selection within the N entries in the vector h, although such a scenario may not arise in real systems.
Techniques are provided herein to obtain an enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel in the OFDM system. It is recognized that the impulse response of the wireless channel can be characterized by L taps, where L is typically much less than the number of total subbands in the system (i.e., L<N). That is, if an impulse is applied to the wireless channel by the transmitter, then L time-domain samples (at the sample rate of W) would be sufficient to characterize the response of the wireless channel based on this impulse stimulus. The number of taps L for the channel impulse response is dependent on the delay spread of the system, with a longer delay spread corresponding to a larger value for L.
Because only L taps are needed for the channel impulse response, the channel frequency response H lies in a subspace of dimension L (instead of N). More specifically, the frequency response of the wireless channel may be fully characterized based on the channel gains for as few as L appropriately selected subbands, instead of all N subbands. Even if more than L channel gains are available, an enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel may be obtained by suppressing the noise components outside this subspace, as described below.
The model for the OFDM system may be expressed as:
r=H∘x+n, Eq (3)
where
The channel estimation techniques described herein may be used in conjunction with various pilot transmission schemes. For clarity, these techniques are described for two specific pilot transmission schemes.
In a first pilot transmission scheme, pilot symbols are transmitted on each of the M data subbands. The transmitted pilot may be denoted by an (M×1) vector xd, which includes a specific pilot symbol for each of the M data subbands. The transmit power for the pilot symbol for each data subband may be expressed as Pk=xk2, where xk is the pilot symbol transmitted on the k-th subband.
A receive vector rd may be expressed for the received pilot, similar to that shown in equation (1). More specifically, rd=Hd∘xd+nd, where rd, Hd, xd, and nd are (M×1) vectors that include only M entries of the (N×1) vectors r, H, x, and n, respectively. These M entries correspond to the M data subbands.
An initial estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel, Ĥd, may be expressed as:
Ĥd=rd/xd=Hd+nd/xd, Eq (4)
As shown in equation (4), the initial estimate Ĥd may be determined by the receiver based on the received and transmitted pilot symbols for each of the M data subbands. The initial estimate Ĥd is indicative of the frequency response of the wireless channel for the M data subbands.
As seen from equation (4), the initial estimate Ĥd is distorted by a noise component nd/xd. An enhanced estimate may be obtained by observing that the channel frequency response Hd is the discrete Fourier transform of the channel impulse response hd, and that hd has L taps, where L is typically less than M (i.e., L<M).
A least square estimate of the impulse response of the wireless channel, ĥdis, may be obtained based on the following optimization:
where
The optimization in equation (5) is over all possible channel impulse responses hj. The least square impulse response estimate ĥdis is equal to the hypothesized impulse response hj that results in the minimum error between the initial frequency response estimate Ĥd and the frequency response corresponding to hj, which is given by {tilde over (W)}hj.
The solution to equation (5) may be expressed as:
ĥdis=({tilde over (W)}H{tilde over (W)})−1{tilde over (W)}HĤd. Eq (6)
As shown in equation (6), the least square impulse response estimate ĥdis may be derived based on the initial frequency response estimate Ĥd, which is obtained based on the pilot received on the M data subbands. In particular, the estimate ĥdis may be obtained by performing a “least square operation” (i.e., a pre-multiplication with ({tilde over (W)}H{tilde over (W)})−1{tilde over (W)}H) on the initial estimate Ĥd. The vector ĥdis includes L entries for the L taps of the channel impulse response, where L<M
An enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel, Ĥdis, may then be derived from the least square channel impulse response estimate, ĥdis, as follows:
Ĥdis={tilde over (W)}ĥdis, Eq (7)
where Ĥdis is an (M×1) vector for the enhanced channel frequency response estimate. Equation (7) indicates that the enhanced channel frequency response estimate Ĥdis may be obtained for all M data subbands based on the least square channel impulse response estimate ĥdis that includes only L entries, where L<M.
For clarity, the channel estimation techniques are described above with three distinct steps:
The mean square error (MSE) in the enhanced channel frequency response estimate Ĥdis may be expressed as:
where Pd is the transmit power used for the pilot symbol in each of the M data subbands.
It can be shown that the MSE in equation (9) is the trace of the noise covariance matrix after the least square operation (i.e., the covariance matrix of {tilde over (W)}({tilde over (W)}H{tilde over (W)})−1{tilde over (W)}Hnd).
In a second pilot transmission scheme, pilot symbols are transmitted on each of S designated subbands, where S<N and S≧L. Typically, the number of designated subbands is less than the number of data subbands (i.e., S<M). In this case, the other (M−S) data subbands may be used for other transmissions. For example, on the downlink, the other (M−S) data subbands may be used to transmit traffic data and/or overhead data. On the uplink, the M data subbands may be partitioned into disjoint groups of S subbands, and each group may then be assigned to a different terminal for pilot transmission. This subband multiplexing, whereby multiple terminals transmit concurrently on disjoint groups of subbands, may be used to improve system efficiency. For clarity, channel estimation is described below for subband multiplexing whereby each designated terminal transmits a pilot only on its S assigned subbands.
The transmit pilot for each terminal may be denoted by an (S×1) vector xi, which includes a specific pilot symbol for each of the S subbands assigned to the terminal. The transmit power for the pilot symbol for each assigned subband may be expressed as Pi,k=xi,k2, where xi,k is the pilot symbol transmitted on the k-th subband by terminal i.
An initial estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel, Ĥi, for terminal i may be expressed as:
Ĥi=ri/xi=Hi+ni/xi, Eq (10)
where
The initial estimate Ĥi may be determined by an access point for terminal i based on the received and transmitted pilot symbols for each of the S subbands assigned to the terminal. The initial estimate Ĥi is indicative of the frequency response of the wireless channel for the S subbands assigned to terminal i. Again, the initial estimate Ĥi is distorted by a noise component ni/xi. An enhanced channel estimate may be obtained for terminal i as follows.
A least square estimate of the impulse response of the wireless channel, ĥiis for terminal i may be obtained based on the following optimization:
where
Again, the optimization in equation (11) is over all possible channel impulse responses hj. The least square channel impulse response estimate ĥiis for terminal i is equal to the hypothesized response hj that results in the minimum error between the initial frequency response estimate Ĥi and the frequency response corresponding to hj, which is given by
The solution to equation (11) may be expressed as:
ĥiis=(
As shown in equation (12), the least square channel impulse response estimate ĥiis for terminal i may be derived based on the initial channel frequency response estimate Ĥi, which is obtained based on the uplink pilot received on only the S subbands assigned to terminal i. In particular, the estimate ĥiis may be obtained by performing a least square operation (i.e., a pre-multiplication with (
An enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel, Ĥiis, for terminal i may then be derived from the least square channel impulse response estimate ĥiis, as follows:
Ĥiis={tilde over (W)}ĥiis, Eq (13)
The enhanced channel frequency response estimate Ĥiis may be derived directly from the initial channel frequency response estimate Ĥi, as follows:
Ĥiis={tilde over (W)}(
Equation (14) combines equations (12) and (13), and the derivation of the least square channel impulse response estimate ĥiis is implicitly performed.
The quality of the enhanced estimate Ĥiis is dependent on various factors, one of which is whether all or only a subset of the N total subbands is used for data transmission. Each of these two cases is analyzed separately below.
If all N subbands are used for data transmission (i.e., M=N), then the mean square error (MSE) of the enhanced channel frequency response estimate Ĥiis for terminal i may be expressed as:
where
It can be shown that the MSE in equation (15) is the trace of the noise covariance matrix after the least square operation (i.e. the covariance matrix of W(
A sufficient condition to attain the minimum mean square error (MMSE) for the enhanced estimate Ĥiis is to have
It can be shown that the MSE for the enhanced estimate Ĥiis, which is obtained based on pilot transmission on only S assigned subbands, is the same as the MSE for a channel estimate Ĥnis, which is obtained based on pilot transmission on all N subbands, if the same amount of total power is used for pilot transmission. This can be achieved by increasing the transmit power for each of the S subbands assigned to terminal i, as follows:
where Pn is the “average” transmit power for the N subbands.
The OFDM system may be operated in a frequency band that has a per MHz power constraint of P dBm/MHz. In this case, the total transmit power Ptotal for each terminal is limited by P·W dBm (i.e., there is a total power constraint of Ptotal≦P·W dBm). The average transmit power can then be given as Pn=Ptotal/N, and the power transmitted per subband will be Pi=Ptotal/S, if the spacing between consecutive subbands of the S subbands is less than 1 MHz. If the spacing between consecutive subbands is greater than 1 MHz, then the average power constraint may limit the total transmit power Ptotal to less than P·W (i.e., Ptotal≦P·W), which may then result in degraded quality for the channel estimate (i.e., increased MSE in the channel estimate).
From the above analysis, the MSE of the channel estimate Ĥiis obtained based on pilot transmission on only S subbands is the same as the MSE of the channel estimate obtained based on pilot transmission on all N subbands if the following conditions are satisfied:
When the above conditions are met, then the MMSE is attained for the enhanced estimate Ĥiis, as long as S≧Cp. To accommodate the maximum number of terminals, the groups may be defined such that only L subbands are included in each group, so that the maximum number of groups can be formed.
If only a subset of the N total subbands is used for data transmission (i.e., M<N), which is the case if some subbands are used for guard subbands, then the MMSE is attained only if S=M. If S<M, then the noise covariance matrix after the least square operation is colored and the MMSE cannot be attained for the enhanced estimate Ĥiis. The colored noise covariance matrix results in unequal eigenvalues for W(
is greater than 1. The spread χ is maximum (and hence the MSE is maximum) when S=Cp and χ gets closer to 1 if S≈1.1 Cp, resulting in an MSE that is closer to that in equation (16). Hence, for the case in which M<N, the MSE is minimized for the enhanced estimate Ĥiis if the following conditions are satisfied:
The Q groups of subbands may be assigned to up to Q terminals for uplink pilot transmission. Each terminal would then transmit a pilot only on its S assigned subbands. With subband multiplexing, up to Q terminals may simultaneously transmit pilots on the uplink on up to M usable subbands. This can greatly reduce the amount of overhead needed for uplink pilot transmission.
To allow the access point to obtain high quality channel estimates, each terminal may increase the transmit power per subband by a factor of Q. This would result in the total energy for the pilot transmission on the S assigned subbands to be the same as if all M data subbands were used for pilot transmission. The same total pilot energy would allow the access point to estimate the channel response for all M usable subbands based on pilot transmission on only a subset of these subbands with little or no loss in quality, as described above.
If subband multiplexing is used to permit simultaneous pilot transmission by multiple terminals, then the signals from nearby terminals may cause substantial interference to the signals from faraway terminals if all terminals transmit at full power. In particular, it can be shown that frequency offset among the terminals can result in inter-subband interference. This interference can cause degradation in the channel estimate derived from uplink pilots and/or increase the bit error rate of uplink data transmissions. To mitigate the effects of inter-subband interference, the terminals may be power controlled so that the nearby terminals do not cause excessive interference to faraway terminals.
The effect of interference from nearby terminals was investigated, and it was found that power control may be applied coarsely to mitigate inter-subband interference. In particular, it was found that if the maximum frequency offset among the terminals is 300 Hz or less in the case of the exemplary system with 256 total subbands in a 20 MHz channel, and Q=12, then by limiting the received signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) of the nearby terminals to 40 dB or less, there would be a loss of 1 dB or less in the SNRs of the other terminals. If the frequency offset among the terminals is 1000 Hz or less, then the SNRs of the nearby terminals should be limited to 27 dB to ensure 1 dB or less of loss in the SNRs of the other terminals. If the SNR needed to achieve the highest rate supported by an OFDM system is less than 27 dB (40 dB), then limiting the SNR of each terminal to 27 dB or less (or 40 dB or less) would not have any impact on the maximum supported rate for the nearby terminals.
The coarse power control requirements stated above may be achieved with a slow power control loop. For example, control messages may be sent when and as needed to adjust the uplink power of nearby terminals (e.g., when the power level changes due to movement by these terminals). Each terminal may be informed of the initial transmit power level to use for the uplink as part of a call setup procedure when accessing the system.
The groups of subbands may also be assigned to the terminals in a manner to mitigate the effect of inter-subband interference. In particular, terminals with high received SNRs may be assigned subbands that are near each other. Terminals with low received SNRs may be assigned subbands that are also near each other, but away from the subbands assigned to the terminals with high received SNRs.
Certain benefits may be obtained from the subband grouping and uniform subband spacing described above. However, other channel grouping and spacing schemes may also be used, and this is within the scope of the invention. In general, the groups may include the same or different number of subbands, and the subbands in each group may be uniformly or non-uniformly distributed across the M usable subbands.
An initial estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel, Ĥi, is first obtained for the S assigned subbands based on the pilot received on these S subbands, as shown in equation (10) (step 612). The DFT matrix
A least square estimate of the impulse response of the wireless channel, ĥiis, is then derived based on the initial channel frequency response estimate Ĥi and the matrix
An enhanced estimate of the frequency response of the wireless channel, Ĥiis, is then derived based on the least square channel impulse response estimate ĥiis and the matrix {tilde over (W)}, as shown in equation (13) (step 620). The vector Ĥiis includes the complex gains for all subbands covered by the matrix {tilde over (W)}. The derivations for steps 616 and 620 may be combined, as described above and shown in equation (14).
On the downlink, at access point 700, traffic data is provided to a TX data processor 710, which formats, codes, and interleaves the traffic data to provide coded data. An OFDM modulator 720 then receives and processes the coded data and pilot symbols to provide a stream of OFDM symbols. The processing by OFDM modulator 720 may include (1) symbol mapping the coded data to form modulation symbols, (2) multiplexing the modulation symbols with pilot symbols, (3) transforming the modulation symbols and pilot symbols to obtain transformed symbols, and (4) appending a cyclic prefix to each transformed symbol to form a corresponding OFDM symbol. For the downlink, the pilot symbols may be multiplexed with the modulation symbols using, for example, time division multiplexing (TDM). For TDM, the pilot and modulation symbols are transmitted on different time slots. The pilot symbols may be transmitted on all M usable subbands or a subset of these subbands.
A transmitter unit (TMTR) 722 then receives and converts the stream of OFDM symbols into one or more analog signals and further conditions (e.g., amplifies, filters, and frequency upconverts) the analog signals to generate a downlink modulated signal suitable for transmission over the wireless channel. The modulated signal is then transmitted via an antenna 724 to the terminals.
At terminal 750, the downlink modulated signal is received by antenna 752 and provided to a receiver unit (RCVR) 754. Receiver unit 754 conditions (e.g., filters, amplifies, and frequency downconverts) the received signal and digitizes the conditioned signal to provide samples. An OFDM demodulator 756 then removes the cyclic prefix appended to each OFDM symbol, transforms each recovered transformed symbol using an FFT, and demodulates the recovered modulation symbols to provide demodulated data. An RX data processor 758 then decodes the demodulated data to recover the transmitted traffic data. The processing by OFDM demodulator 756 and RX data processor 758 is complementary to that performed by OFDM modulator 720 and TX data processor 710, respectively, at access point 700.
OFDM demodulator 756 may further determine the initial channel frequency response estimate Ĥd or provide the received pilot symbols that may be used to derive Ĥd. A controller 770 receives Ĥd (or equivalent information), determines the least square channel impulse response estimate ĥdis based on Ĥd, and further obtains the enhanced channel frequency response estimate Ĥdis based on ĥdis. The enhanced estimate Ĥdis may thereafter be used for uplink data transmission.
On the uplink, traffic data is processed by a TX data processor 782 and provided to an OFDM modulator 784, which also receives pilot symbols. OFDM modulator 784 may then process the coded data and pilot symbols similar to that described for OFDM modulator 720. For the uplink, the pilot symbols may also be multiplexed with the modulation symbols using TDM. Moreover, the pilot symbols may be transmitted on only S subbands assigned to terminal 750 during time slots designated for pilot transmission.
A transmitter unit 786 then receives and processes the stream of OFDM symbols to generate an uplink modulated signal suitable for transmission over the wireless channel. The modulated signal is then transmitted via an antenna 752 to the access point.
At access point 700, the uplink modulated signal is processed by a receiver unit 742 to provide samples. These samples are then processed by an OFDM demodulator 744 to provide demodulated data, which are further processed by an RX data processor 746 to recover the transmitted traffic data. OFDM demodulator 744 may determine the initial channel frequency response estimate Ĥi for each designated terminal or provide the received pilot symbols that may be used to obtain Ĥi. A controller 730 receives Ĥi (or equivalent information), determines the least square channel impulse response ĥiis for designated active terminal based on Ĥi, and further obtains the enhanced channel frequency response estimate Ĥiis based on ĥiis. The enhanced estimate Ĥiis may thereafter be used for downlink data transmission to the terminal.
Controllers 730 and 770 direct the operation at the access point and terminal, respectively. Memory units 732 and 772 provide storage for program codes and data used by controllers 730 and 770, respectively.
The channel estimation techniques described herein may be implemented by various means. For example, these techniques may be implemented in hardware, software, or a combination thereof. For a hardware implementation, the elements used to implement any one or a combination of the techniques may be implemented within one or more application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), digital signal processors (DSPs), digital signal processing devices (DSPDs), programmable logic devices (PLDs), field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), processors, controllers, micro-controllers, microprocessors, other electronic units designed to perform the functions described herein, or a combination thereof.
For a software implementation, the channel estimation techniques may be implemented with modules (e.g., procedures, functions, and so on) that perform the functions described herein. The software codes may be stored in a memory unit (e.g., memory units 732 or 772 in
The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present invention. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein.
The present Application for patent is a Continuation and claims priority to patent application Ser. No. 10/340,130 entitled “CHANNEL ESTIMATION FOR OFDM COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS” filed Jan. 10, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,039,001 now allowed, and assigned to the assignee hereof and hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein. This application claims priority and is related to both U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/422,362, filed Oct. 29, 2002, entitled “Channel Estimation For OFDM Communication Systems,” and to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/422,368, entitled “Uplink Pilot And Signaling Transmission In Wireless Communication Systems,” which are incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
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Child | 11101908 | US |