The invention relates to processing of digital input signals and more particularly to an improved method, system and apparatus to decode trellis-encoded communication signals such as signals encoded according to an Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC) standard.
A conventional decision feedback equalizer system 100 is shown as
The input digital signal 102 is provided to a feed-forward linear filter (FFE) 104. After passing the FFE 104, the thus-filtered input signal 106 can be represented as Y(n) by the formula shown in Equation (1):
Y(n)=dn+nn+isin (1)
In Equation (1), dn is the data to be recovered from the input digital signal 102, nn is white noise in the input digital signal 102, and isin is the inter-symbol-interference component of the input digital signal 102. The inter-symbol-interference component is nominally cancelled out by the decision feedback filter (DFE) 108. In
In accordance with an aspect, a decision feedback equalizer is configured to equalize an input signal to generate a recovered output signal. Linear feed-forward filter circuitry is configured to provide a linearly filtered output signal based on the input signal. Composite trellis decoder circuitry configured to process a combined signal that is based on a combination of at least the linearly feed-forward filtered output signal and on output of linear or non-linear feedback filter circuitry, in accordance with state metrics generated by processing a composite trellis diagram relative to the combined signal, to provide a trellis-decoded output signal as input to the linear or non-linear feedback filter circuitry. The composite trellis decoder circuitry is further configured to provide a particular phase output of the combined signal, based on the state metrics, as the decoded output signal.
Referring to
N. Hulyalkar et al. has disclosed using a partial trellis decoder in place of the simple slicer 112, as shown in
Thus, the use of the partial trellis decoder 112′ theoretically results in a significant improvement of equalizer performance, as opposed to using the simple slicer 112. However, the above discussion assumes an ideal case, that is, a case in which the input signal of the equalizer is free from carrier offset and/or phase jitter. However, the actual situation is typically much different from the ideal case.
To address the carrier offset, carrier recovery functionality may be included.
Let ωc denote the signal carrier frequency and ω1 denote the local carrier frequency. The carrier offset Δω is characterized as shown in Equation (2):
Δω=ωc−ω1 (2)
Thus, the input to the equalizer portion 404 (i.e., the output of the carrier recovery loop 402) can be expressed as r(n)ejΔωn. If W(n) denotes the FFE 406 output, then:
In Equation (3), N denotes the number of taps of the FFE 406, and Ci (i=0, 1, . . . N−1) is the coefficient of taps.
When the carrier recovery loop 402 gets lock, Δω will trend to close to zero, with a small residual offset that is independent of time. So, in equation (3), e−jΔωi (i=0, 1, . . . N−1) is independent of time and can be compensated by the FFE 406 with properly adjusted tap coefficients. On the other hand, the phase factor, ejΔωn is a time related variable and should be the major source of phase jitter. Therefore, under a phase jitter condition, the FFE 406 should produce the same output as in the ideal case, except for the phase factor.
With the effect of the phase factor, however well the slicer (e.g., either the simple slicer 112 in
where ISIoffset is the total equivalent inter-symbol-interference. Even if the inter-symbol-interference could approach zero, the equalizer output will still contain a phase factor, which will lower the signal-to-noise ratio of the final output.
From equation (3), it can be seen that the phase property of the FFE input 102 (using the reference numerals of
For decoding a signal encoded according to a continuous phase modulation (CPM) encoding scheme, R. Huff proposed a composite trellis concept for carrier recovery based on the inherent phase trellis structure of CPM. See U.S. Pat. No. 5,974,091, issued Oct. 26, 1999. Huff also discloses generalizing the composite trellis concept to other modulation schemes.
Referring to
Thus, for example, to account for the effect of the phase factor, as discussed extensively above, the composite trellis technique may be employed. For 8VSB (8-level vestigial sideband, the RF modulation scheme used by digital television, in accordance with the ATSC encoding standard),
An example of the constellation of 8VSB is shown in
Details of operation of a simple composite trellis decoder are provided in U.S. Pat. No. 5,974,091, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. As mentioned above, in the
The simulation results shown in
This application claims priority under 35 USC §119(e) from provisional application No. 60/752,620, filed Dec. 20, 2005 and entitled ITERATION DECODING FOR ATSC STANDARD (inventor: Yuwei Zhang), which is incorporated herein in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5974091 | Huff | Oct 1999 | A |
6178209 | Hulyalker et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6477208 | Huff | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6850563 | Hulyalkar | Feb 2005 | B1 |
20030189994 | Sommer et al. | Oct 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO 02087181 | Oct 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070140329 A1 | Jun 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60752620 | Dec 2005 | US |