1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to wireless telecommunication, and more particularly to location services and public safety.
2. Background of Related Art
Existing land mobile radios (LMRs) can support A-GPS and pushing A-GPS to proprietary systems developed by LMR vendors. The capability is available in commercial radios as well as the Amateur Radio Service (ARS). For instance, the Amateur Radio Service provides Automatic Packet Radio Service (e.g., aprs.org) for tracking of ham radios.
However, conventional LMR location services are proprietary and not accessible to other location technologies or devices. Moreover, current LMR systems are also deficient in areas where the LMR device is not visible to GPS satellites.
In accordance with the principles of the present invention, a method of providing location of an LMR device in a cellular network, comprises storing, in a physical land mobile radio (LMR) wireless network location service, a current location of a given LMR device. A correlation of location is determined between the given LMR device and a given cellular device. The current location of the given LMR device into a physical GMLC server is PULLed. The current location of the given LMR device is stored, and an identity of the given LMR device, and an identity of the given cellular device, are stored into an LMR to cell identity mapping database. The current location of the given LMR device is accessible in a cellular wireless network to requests for location of the given cellular device.
A method of storing an LMR-determined location in a cellular location cache, comprises PUSHing, from a land mobile radio (LMR) location service server PUSHes a current location of a given LMR device into a physical GMLC server via an interface between the LMR service server and the GMLC server. The current location of the given LMR device is PUSHed from the physical GMLC server into a GMLC location cache.
A method of storing an LMR-determined location in a cellular location cache, comprises PUSHing, from a land mobile radio (LMR) location service server, a current location of a given LMR device into a physical GMLC server via an interface between the LMR service server and the GMLC server. The current location of the given LMR device is PUSHed from the physical GMLC server into a GMLC location cache.
A method of storing an LMR-determined location in a cellular location cache, comprises PUSHing, from a land mobile radio (LMR) location service server, a current location of a given LMR device into a physical SLP server via an interface between the LMR service server and the SLP server. The current location of the given LMR device is PUSHed from the physical SLP server into an SLP location cache.
Features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description with reference to the drawings, in which:
The present invention integrates cellular and Land Mobile Radio (LMR) location services into a single device. The invention discloses adaption of otherwise well-known cellular location methods uniquely integrated into the land mobile radio (LMR) environment, with the result being that LMR calculated positions become available from a standard location cache database (e.g., a GMLC cache database or a SLP cache database).
The present invention enables reliable positioning to be reported from LMR radios into a gateway mobile location center (GMLC), providing LMR-determined location information, which is particularly useful, e.g., in the event that the cellular network fails completely. During many recent weather-damaging events (e.g., during Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Sandy, etc.), the cellular network failed. Thus, the location of wireless devices could not be obtained. The inventors have appreciated that this is particularly dangerous, e.g., with respect to 9-1-1 emergency calls, first responders in a building on fire, etc. The present invention enables first responder wireless devices, and other wireless devices of users who also have an LMR radio (police, fire fighters, even private companies with tracked fleets, etc.) to be located with at least an LMR-determined location even when the cellular network fails.
The present invention, among other things, adapts a well-defined LTE positioning protocol (LPP) for a new use between Land Mobile Radios (LMR) devices and cellular/mobile devices, and vice versa.
The present invention also enables cellular location techniques in a Land Mobile Radio context.
In particular, as shown in
The LMR 12 is located by a LMR location service 56, and the LMR location determined by the LMR location service 56 is either pushed to, or pulled by, a GMLC 58. The GMLC 58 associates the LMR 12 with a wireless device also physically carried by the user of the LMR 12, and stores both that association with an identification of both the LMR 12 and the associated cell device, and its location determined by the LMR location service 56, in an appropriate GMLC cache 60.
In particular, as shown in
The cellular radio 12 includes in pertinent part an antenna 34, a WiFi module 36, a location satellite (e.g. GPS or GLONASS) module 38, and a transceiver 40.
The GMLC components relevant to the control plane location services embodiment include an LMR Antenna/Repeater system 52, a Cellular LTE RAN 54, an LMR Location Service 56, a Gateway Mobile Location Center (GMLC) 58, a GMLC Cache 60, a Home Subscriber Service (HSS) 62, a Mobility Management Entity (MME) 64, an Evolved Serving Mobile Location Center (eSMLC) 66, and an Le Interface 90 that applications use to submit location requests.
In particular, as shown in
The SLP components relevant to the user plane location services embodiment include an LMR Antenna/Repeater system 52, a Cellular LTE RAN 54, an LMR Location Service 56, a SUPL Location Platform (SLP) 84, an SLP Cache 82, and an Le Interface 90 that applications use to submit location requests.
The present invention adds network trilateration techniques otherwise unavailable in conventional land mobile radio position calculation methods, and enables location to be pushed into 3GPP GMLC in a control plane embodiment (
The present invention also adds network trilateration techniques otherwise unavailable in current land mobile radio (LMR) systems:
The US is covered in repeaters that forward voice communications from a handheld device to other devices to facilitate communications. These repeaters may be analog repeaters or digital repeaters. Repeaters are deployed for commercial communications as well as for the Amateur Service.
All Amateur Service Radio repeaters broadcast their call sign at least every 10 minutes. It is assumed that commercial repeaters do similar.
The LMR system has a scanning mechanism that constantly looks for and processes the call sign or other identification data. As multiple repeaters are scanned, time delay techniques, SNR techniques and/or even angle of arrival techniques are utilized to determine the distance from multiple repeaters.
In the case of the user plane embodiment of
In a GSM system such as shown in
For instance, the LMR 12 knows the current antenna/repeater it is transmitting to as well as the other antenna/repeaters that are “visible” to it. The GMLC includes a GMLC cache database 60 (
Observed time difference of arrival (OTDOA) measurements may also be utilized by the LMR 12 or the LMR network to determine its location.
Current land mobile radios (LMRs) 12 support stand-alone global positioning satellite (GPS) methods. Satellite location determination can take up to 2 minutes to achieve. LMRs 12 may utilize their data packet interface to receive satellite assistance data to reduce the time to satellite acquisition,
Many LMRs 12 currently support Standalone GPS. The present invention enables satellite assistance data to be sent to the LMR 12 from an eSMLC 66 (in the control plane embodiment shown in
Any location information that is transferred on the cellular location protocols or the new protocols are preferably shared across the components of the device. For example, satellite assistance data obtained via the SUPL protocol to the device is available to the device in the event that the cellular network fails.
Location Push from LMR into GMLC/SLP Cache
Once an LMR 12 obtains its location via either existing means or by methods described herein, the LMR location service 56 preferably pushes its location into the GMLC 58 via a P2 interface between the LMR 12 and the GMLC 58 (as shown in
The LMR 12 pushes calculated location using the techniques of this invention, and the currently supported S-GPS, into the GMLC location cache database 60. LMU type functionality at a repeater pushes calculated location into the GMLC cache database 60. For all location requests received at the GMLC 58, the GMLC cache database 60 is queried to see if the cached position from the LMR/Repeater meets the requested quality of position and can be used.
Location Pull from the GMLC/SLP to the Proprietary Location Server
Existing LMR infrastructure currently stores the location of each LMR 12 in a LMR Location Service server 56. The GMLC 58 (
Positioning Protocol Mapping from Cellular to LMR
As can be seen in
The GMLC 58 in the control plane embodiment of
Preferably the entries maintained in the LMR to Cell Identity Mapping Database 207 are dynamic, and updated as necessary, as people generally pick up whatever LMR is charged out on any given day. The LMR to cell Identity Mapping Database 207 preferably comprises a simple lookup table that cross-references LMR ID, Cellular ID, and even Cellular ID Type. The GMLC 58 shown in
LMRs 12, and cellular devices 32, may have multiple identifiers. For the cellular device 32 it may be, e.g., an MSID (MDN, MSISDN). For LMRs 12, it may be, e.g., an LMR device ID, or may be a first responders call sign.
In accordance with the present invention, an LCS Client is able to request location by either an LMR or cell identity.
The GMLC 58 of the control plane embodiment of
A first responder, e.g., may be carrying their personal mobile device, a cellular network device 32, and a traditional LMR 12. In accordance with the present invention, the GMLC 58 includes the LMR to cell identity map database 207 to map and correlate these multiple devices.
The packet radio service for both existing LMRs and amateur devices support sending SMS and e-mail. These devices are preferably integrated into the relevant SMS-911 service.
Relevant location-based standards may utilized in accordance with the principles of the present invention. Exemplary standards include:
3GPP Standards can be downloaded using: http://www.3qpp.org/dvnareporU23271.htm where 23271.htm is for standard 3GPP TS 23.271.
The present invention has particular applicability to enable commercial land mobile radio (LMR) providers GPS-based tracking of commercial devices. Also, to any company offering a combined LMR/cellular location service.
While the invention has been described with reference to the exemplary embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will be able to make various modifications to the described embodiments of the invention without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention.
The application claims priority from U.S. Prov. No. 61/898,085, entitled “Integrated Land Mobile Radios (LMRs) With Cellular Location Nodes” filed Oct. 31, 2013, the entirety of which is explicitly incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61898085 | Oct 2013 | US |