The present invention relates to method and apparatus adapted to improve the receiving of signals in wireless communications systems, and more particularly to the improvement of the ranging process in such wireless networks.
Ranging in certain wireless networks such as those based on OFDMA technology (e.g. WiMax) is done by generating a ranging pattern for a subset out of the available tones for the duration of 2 or more symbols. Taking WiMax as an example, the tones are divided into subsets of 4 successive tones called tiles, e.g. Tile1=tones 1 to 4, Tile2=tones 5 to 8, Tile3=tones 9 to 12, and so on. Out of all the tiles, a subset of tiles is selected for deriving a ranging code as demonstrated in
Let us assume that x={x1, x2, . . . , xN}T denotes a ranging code vector transmitted over an OFDM multi tone channel, where N is the number of tones and code symbol xk is transmitted at the tone k. For tones that are not used in the ranging code, we set xk=0. Let now τ be the timing offset of the transmitter, and Δw—the tones' frequency spacing in [rad/sec]. The purpose of the ranging process is to discover whether a transmitter is transmitting a ranging code, and if so, estimate its timing offset (“range”) τ. Detection and timing estimation are based on the received signal rk:
rk=ckxk·ej·kΔ
where
ck is the complex channel response for tone k; and
vk is the additive noise for tone k.
Moreover, a typical ranging protocol allows several ranging codes to be transmitted at the same time on the same tiles, as long as each of the ranging codes is different from the others, and provided that there are not too many ranging codes all together so that their SINR (Signal to Interference and Noise Ratio) is sufficient. A suitable receiver should be able to separately detect them and also time their arrival. The separation of overlapping code is based on a CDMA like principle:
After correlating {rk}—the received vector—with x={x1, x2, . . . , xN}T—the ranging code, the other interfering codes would appear as Additive White Gaussian Noise (hereinafter “AWGN”) at the correlator output.
For better clarification, let us assume that the additive noise vk is an Independent Identically Distributed (I.I.D.) Gaussian random variable having zero mean and variance equal to N0. The additive noise25 vk accounts for interference as well as for noise, as long as the interfering code is different than the desired code. Next, we assume that the channels are of the Rayleigh type. Now, let c={c1, c2, . . . , cN}T define the vector channel and assume that c is a Gaussian random vector with zero mean and autocorrelation matrix Rc.
By defining
X=diag([x1e−j·0Δ
equation (1) can be re-written as
r=Xc+v (2)
where r={r1, r2, . . . , rM}T and v={v1, v2, . . . , vM}T
A typical ranging requirement is for the receiver to use r to detect one of the known transmitted codes x and its corresponding timing offset τ over a channel having a prescribed false alarm rate PFAR and minimal mis-detection probability. The receiver may use reception on one or more antennas for this purpose.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus that allow improving the performance of reception in wireless network, and particularly to improve the ranging process, such as when new subscribers join the network, etc.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method and device that are adapted to reduce the complexity involved in using conventional methods for carrying out the calculations required while receiving wireless transmissions.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a method and device enabling a multiple antenna receiver to carry out simultaneous phasing in time the domain and in the space domain.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide a novel multiple reception antenna base station.
Other objects of the invention will become apparent as the description of the invention proceeds.
In accordance with a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided in a wireless communications network a method for detecting and/or estimating a ranging signal transmitted to a base station of that wireless communications network. As was previously explained, such ranging signal is constructed of a plurality of time-frequency tiles (referred to hereinafter as “tiles”) spread over the frequency bandwidth, where each such tile comprises a number of tones.
The method according to a first embodiment of the present invention comprising the steps of:
Preferably, each of the correlations is conducted on one of these tiles with a pre-determined number of its adjacent neighboring tiles in the frequency domain, but on less than all of the tiles comprising the ranging signal. The pre-defined number of neighboring tiles could preferably be 1 to 3 neighbors.
In addition, or in the alternative, a value for maximum allowable frequency offset is determined, and for each of the tiles the correlations are conducted with as many neighbors as there are within that frequency offset. Next, the plurality of the resulting correlations thus obtained, are summed and the delay associated with the ranging signal is evaluated in order to enable estimating the timing offset. This sum of correlations is then preferably correlated with exponents (delay hypothesis), or in the alternative a coarse IFFT is used to estimate the actual timing offset.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the use of short autocorrelation obtained as explained above, smoothes the timing information which is required to handle actual channels having none-zero delay spread.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the correlations carried out on each one of these tiles are then multiplied (in the frequency domain) by a proper window (preferably characterized by a power delay profile), prior to calculating the correlation with time hypothesis exponents. In addition, this process may further be repeated with several windows (e.g. different power delay profiles that are appropriate for vehicular vs indoor stations) in order to obtain the best estimate for the ranging signal. A detector is then used to operate at one or more windows that are optimized to a specific power delay profile (e.g. starting at high value and decaying with time), in order to determine the ranging signal. Such autocorrelation-based ranging method was found to improve timing performance by a factor of at least 6 with respect to tile-based methods, and by a factor of at least 3 with respect to non-smoothed time domain methods.
According to still another embodiment of the invention, the method is adapted for use with an array of antennas. Let us consider for example a case of an array comprising two antennas (II+II calibrated array can be handled similarly). According to this embodiment of the invention, an autocorrelation is calculated for each the antennas separately, and a time cross-correlation is calculated between these two antennas. The use of the three correlations thus obtained, allows to combine both the time domain and the space domain phasing (e.g. looking at a specific direction with a specific timing delay), which in return allows carrying out a ranging process by coherently combining the results obtained for the two antennas associated with the process, rather than combining them in a non-coherent fashion. Consequently, an improved performance is achieved.
According to still another embodiment of the invention, in order to allow further reduction in the complexity of the calculation, the method provided by the present invention is used in a multi stage fashion. At first, shorter auto correlations (without taking the tiles' neighbors into account) are calculated and used to discard weak hypothesis. Then the remaining ones are augmenting to longer autocorrelations (or antenna cross correlation) to allow handling the stronger hypothesis with higher degree of precision.
By yet another aspect of the present invention there is provided a receiver adapted to operate in a wireless communications network and comprising:
an interface operative to allow receiving wireless transmission comprising a ranging signal that comprises a plurality of tiles from at least one wireless transmitter;
at least one processor adapted to:
FIG. 1—presents a schematic illustration of a ranging subchannel, being a subset of tiles for deriving a ranging code;
FIG. 2—demonstrates an example of the results obtained by using different methods while detecting one code of 4 candidate Codes (different correlations), using Pedestrian B channel, and delay uncertainty 0-25 μs;
FIG. 3—presents timing estimation error associated with the different detection methods used to obtain
FIG. 4—demonstrates an example of the results obtained by using different methods while detecting 4 codes out of 16 candidate codes, using Pedestrian B channel, and delay uncertainty 0-25 μs; and
FIG. 5—presents timing estimation error associated with the different detection methods used to obtain
As was previously explained, the receiver accepting the ranging signal is required to detect one out of known transmitted codes x together with its corresponding timing offset τ over the channel, having a prescribed false alarm rate PFAR and minimal mis-detection probability. The timing offset is assumed to be a non-random but yet unknown parameter. In order to overcome this problem, the log of the likelihood ratio is calculated:
A detection is determined if η(r)>η0, where η0 is selected so as to meet the required PFAR, and the variable τ is selected to achieve the maximum value for the time offset.
According to an embodiment of the present invention in a case of a single antenna system, the following method to ranging code detection and ranging offset estimation is provided. As will be shown hereinafter, the method is relatively simple and may provide good approximation to the optimal solution for low SINR ranging code reception.
The method according to this embodiment comprises the following steps:
a. Determine an expected frequency autocorrelation vector of a channel, to be Rcc
b. Determine a set of demodulated per tone measurements yk=xkHrk, given over all tones that are associated with the various ranging code tiles. Over the remaining tones (i.e. the tones not used by the ranging code(s) we may assume yk=0, but in any case, these remaining tones are not involved in the metric computation.
c. Compute autocorrelation across tiles yk (typically a tile and its close neighbors according to span of Rcc(l).
d. Sum up the thus computed autocorrelation over the applicable tiles, to receive the result Ryy. Since Ryy is conjugate symmetric, it would preferably suffice to compute only one side of the autocorrelation.
e. Multiply the conjugate of autocorrelation Ryy with a windowing function, Rcc.
f. Use Fast Fourier Transform (“FFT”) to correlate the resulting product with multiple exponents having different hypothesized time offsets, and decide according to the resulting following metric:
g. If the value of this metric is higher than one or more predetermined thresholds, then detection is determined to be positive and the timing offset τ achieving the minimum value that is associated therewith, is determined to be the timing offset estimate.
This method may also be efficiently combined with beamforming techniques, where the user may carry out spatial beamforming process while also optimizing the delay τ.
Now, let us consider another embodiment by which a method for handling a case where we have a plurality of narrowly spaced antennas array (e.g. antenna spacing half the carrier wavelength) is provided. The number of the antennas is designated hereinafter as Na.
i. Compute windowed autocorrelation, Rcc(l) Ryya,b(l)H, for all antenna and all antenna pairs (designating the antennas in each such pair as a and b respectively), and apply a detector as described for example herein in the following steps ii to iv.
ii. Sum the autocorrelations thus obtained according to right most summation and apply a Na FFT's to get a coarse time domain representation thereof (FFT of Na will suffice in most cases due to k symmetry).
iii. For each candidate delay τ, carry out a maximization procedure to find maximal θ (any appropriate maximization process as known in the art per se may be used). For example, a trivial procedure would be to check several beamforming directions θ according to the array resolution (1/aperture); and
iv. Select the combination of (τ, θ) so as to maximize the value of μ(y) and compare the value received with a pre-defined threshold.
Furthermore, the method described above may also be extended for linear non-uniformly spaced arrays using the spatial autocorrelation Ra (i.e. antenna autocorrelation matrix). Let us designate the frequency autocorrelation as Rf and assume that the spatial and the frequency (temporal) autocorrelations are independent. This independence results in the combined autocorrelation being the Kronecker product of spatial and frequency autocorrelation matrixes, that is
Rc=Ra{circle around (×)}Rf
In this case the following detector can be used
where Raa and Rff are the vector representations of the autocorrelation matrixes Ra and Rf respectively (this is valid since they are of the Hermitian Toeplitz type). Note that like the temporal detector, it allows reducing complexity when Raa(k) becomes small, as k needs not to go up to Na. Furthermore using symmetry of Raa(k) and Ryya,a-k with respect to k, allows further reduction in the amount of the required computations.
The following are certain advantages in the method proposed by the present invention.
The following Figures are used to illustrate the effectiveness of the methods carried in accordance with the present invention.
In the process of carrying out these various methods, one actual ranging code was transmitted, but the attempt was made to detect 4 ranging codes. The X axis of
The next figure,
Again, the X axis illustrate the EbN0 (bit energy divided by noise density) and the Y axis shows in this Fig., the expectation of the absolute timing error. Once again, one may see that the autocorrelation method using length of 12 tiles (i.e. two actual neighbors on average) outperforms the other methods.
For the next example, let us consider a case of detecting 4 codes out of 16 candidate codes, using Pedestrian B channel, and delay uncertainty 0-25 μs. In
Curve A—Single tile autocorrelation
Curve B—12 tiles autocorrelation (since tiles are sparse, the complexity involved amounts to correlating by only two neighboring tiles on average),
Curve C—IFFT; and
Curve D—Two tone autocorrelation
All these methods were carried out by transmitting four actual ranging codes, and trying at the receiving side to detect 16 ranging codes.
In order to further estimate the complexity of the various methods, the following Table 1 presents a comparison of the estimated complexity using TI C64+ DSP (Himalaya) operating at 1 GHz:
As may be seen from this table, both autocorrelation methods have lower complexity then the time domain processing method (IFFT).
Let us now consider a number of examples demonstrating how the present invention may be applied to various cases:
According to the assumptions made in the previous section (note that the timing offset is implicit in X),
Since Rc is an autocorrelation matrix which has to be positive definite, we may replace c by
c=Rc1/2ξ (7)
where ξ is a vector of independent complex Gaussian normalized (i.e. variance of each is 1) random variables
We assume that Rc is perfectly known.
From equations (6)-(8) we can derive that
Finally
Thus the decision may be made in accordance with the following sufficient statistic
where a code is detected when μ(r)<μ0, for some threshold μ0 chosen to meet the required PFAR. The corresponding maximization argument τ is then used as the timing offset. Note X is defined above as a function of τ.
The above condition (11) can be somewhat simplified by assuming equal magnitude symbols, |xk|=1 and by defining:
y=XHr (12)
The operation used in (12) can be considered as the removal of the modulation (demodulation), in which case (11) will now become:
where D(τ)=diag([I1e−j·0Δ
For the next step, let us simplify (13)
where I is the identity matrix.
Now, let us now denote:
b=yHD(τ)·Rc1/2
VΛVH=RcH/2∥D(τ)∥2Rc1/2+N0·I (15)
where, the last line assumes the existence of a unitary diagonalization, which can be easily verified.
Thus
and upon defining
ζ=Λ1/2VHξ (17)
we get
For a given norm ∥ζ∥2=γ2 we better maximize the Re ( ) thus
thus we get (The Re( ) argument is real)
Since
Upon assigning back (15) one would get
and when solving for ξ, we get
For small received ranging signal (which is the interesting case) we may neglect RcH/2∥D(τ)∥2Rc1/2 as it is significantly smaller than N0·I, thus
By using
(D(τ)·RcD(τ)H)m,n=Ime−j·mΔ
we get
By summation index substitution l≡m−k, and defining Im and ym when being out of range (1, 2, . . . , N) as zero
we would get
Defining Ryy as
We would get the final form of
Since Rcc(l) typically becomes small for large l, we may ignore large l's altogether. Therefore we need only a truncated frequency autocorrelation Ryy*(l), which may be quite fast to compute. Given that the truncated autocorrelation Ryy*(l) is short, we need to correlate each tile only with its close neighbors (e.g. 1 or 2 adjacent tiles), thus, reducing substantially the overall processing required.
Furthermore (30) is actually an FFT of the windowed and truncated frequency auto correlation and thus may be performed quickly. Moreover, since multiplication by Rcc(l) in frequency domain effectively filters the output in time domain, the set of τ values that we need to check, becomes small (coarse τ sampling would suffice). Consequently, small FFT should be adequate.
In view of the above, one embodiment of the present invention provides the following method for the processing procedure
The single antenna solution described above has coherent phasing only in time domain. However in case of multiple antennas we may still further improve the situation. We may carry out beamforming (spatial phasing) and coherent combination based on timing offset at the same time. In order not to lose the signal power in the beamforming process, we need to assume that the ranging transmission angle spread is small with respect to array beamwidth. Consequently, when looking at the CPE direction, we shall not lose transmit power (due to paths that are out of the beam formed main lobe). For a macro cell, due to the low angle spread (e.g. 5 degrees), this will be true for narrow arrays.
By considering pairs of the best delay and the best direction, we obtain the coherent beam forming gain. When assuming Na antennas, then with respect to the single antenna case we may gain an addition of 10*log(Na) [dB].
To derive the beamforming solution we may first beamform using a set of antenna weights {wa}a=1N
First, we need to compute the frequency auto correlation in the direction d={wa}a=1N
Thus defining the antenna cross correlation as:
where a and b are the antenna indexes and l is the frequency offset in tones.
We now get
Combining the above with equation (30) we get the complete solution:
Assuming a narrow uniformly spaced linear array (“ULA”), the weight vector will have a typical form
wa=e−j·2π·aΔ·cos(θ) (32)
where:
Δ—is the ULA array spacing in wavelengths; and
θ—is the angle of arrival with respect to the broadside.
Therefore
Changing summations
In view of the above and in accordance with another embodiment of the invention, there is provided the following processing method:
In case we have several antennas, and we do not want to use beamforming, the following procedure may be carried out. For each antenna we compute the autocorrelation of its tiles, and sum all of them together. Then we may proceed by repeating steps 5 to 7 that are provided in the method described under Example 1, the single antenna solution.
Similarly if we have received several ranging codes, at different—substantially separated—times, we may also proceed by autocorrelation summing. More specifically, for each ranging code we compute the auto correlation among its tiles. Then we sum the auto correlations received at different times. From the fact that we sum autocorrelations it is clear that we are agnostic to phase rotation (due to time separation), hence there is no need to compensate for channel rotation over time.
It should be noted that for subsequent symbols (small time separation) with sufficiently low Doppler, we may assume the channel has rotated insignificantly. In this case it would be better to coherently sum the subsequent ranging symbols, since coherent combining gain is achieved.
Depending on the array structure, the beamforming (i.e. space coherent combining) and non coherent modes may be combined. By assuming that space and frequency correlations are independent, i.e.
E(ca1,f1·ca2,f2H)=E(cf1·cf2H)E(ca1·ca2H)=Rff(f1−f2)·Raa(a1−a2) (36)
Thus, the frequency and space correlation may be separated to the product of a frequency only correlation Rff(f1−f2) and space only correlation Raa(a1−a2) (where the frequency and space correlations are in a vector format). In this case we may also express Rc as the following Kronecker product:
Rc=Ra{circle around (×)}Rf (37)
where the channel (Rc), space (Ra) and frequency (Rf) correlations are in a matrix format. Using a similar derivation as for the single antenna case, we get the following:
Denoting
D=Da(θ){circle around (×)}Df(τ) (38)
Using the assumption in (36) and notation of (37)
By summation index substitution k≡m−n, and defining Ryym,n when out of range (m, n=1, 2, . . . , Na) as zero, we get
Given the above, we may derive the following metric:
As in the single antenna case, we may ignore k as Raa(a1−a2) is rather small, thus considering only a small range for k. For example assume we have a linear array with 4 antennas A1, A2, A3, A4 and the following antenna spacing 0.5*λ, 10*λ and 0.5*λ (where λ is the signal wavelength). Assuming that the pair A1, A2 is far away from the pair A3, A4 for the correlation to be significant we may use the following metric:
Here we effectively combine beamforming for close antennas and non-coherent combining for far antennas. In addition, we use coherent combining for close tones, while non-coherent combining for far tones.
The scheme described in this Example, may be used to allow efficient multistage detection. At the first stage we use a low complexity method to reduce the computation load, but in order not to miss detections we use a low threshold. This obviously leads to detecting substantially more codes than expected, which amounts to having a high false alarm rate. At the second stage, this false alarm rate is subsequently reduced by using more robust detectors—which also lead to having higher complexity. Nevertheless, the second stage is run on substantially less hypothesis than the first stage. In other words, applying the more complex detectors only at the second stage does help to reduce the computation load. This is especially efficient as most computation required for the first stage is contained in the second.
It is to be understood that the above description only includes some embodiments of the invention and serves for its illustration. Numerous other ways of improving the estimation of pilot sequences in telecommunication networks may be devised by a person skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention, and are thus encompassed by the present invention.
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