The disclosure generally relates to the field of satellite communication (SATCOM) technology and, more particularly, relates to a method and a system for hybrid modulation and demodulation.
The Air Force Satellite Control Network (AFSCN) is a satellite control network that is acquired and sustained by the Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC) for HQ Air Force Space Command (AFSPC). The AFSCN provides command, tracking, and telemetry support to assigned satellite missions. The Air Force SGLS is the primary component of this network, and provides tracking, telemetry and command (TT&C) functions with satellites that perform missile warning, navigation, military satellite communications (SATCOM), weather tracking and reporting, as well as intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR). The standard SGLS waveform combines the TT&C signals together and uses a phase modulation scheme for the transmission. The uplink SGLS is operating in the frequency range from 1755 to 1850 MHz in the L-band, and the downlink uses 2200 to 2290 MHz in the S-band.
The Advanced Wireless Services 3 (AWS-3) auction concluded in 2015 begins the DoD's transition to vacate and/or share the 1695-1710 MHz and 1755-1780 MHz bands. The DoD Transition Plans are the foundation for how DoD will make these bands available for commercial mobile broadband usage.
The spectrum sharing plan calls for the solutions to compress the uplink SGLS spectrum and minimize the interference to the neighboring bandwidth. The solutions need be able to solve the operational challenges and retire the risk that was assumed resulting from the transitions of the affected systems. Solutions to these problems and risks also represent an opportunity for DoD to achieve enhanced capability via solutions that address the challenges of commonality, agility, and efficiency.
The disclosed method and system for hybrid modulation and demodulation are directed to solving one or more problems set forth above and other problems in the art.
The present disclosure provides a system for hybrid modulation and demodulation. The system includes a transmitter and a receiver. The transmitter is configured to receive a hybrid signal of a space-ground link system (SGLS), the hybrid signal including a first component and a second component; perform a double sideband (DSB) modulation on the first component of the hybrid signal using a carrier frequency to obtain a first waveform; perform a single sideband (SSB) modulation on the second component of the hybrid signal using the carrier frequency to obtain a second waveform; mix the first waveform and the second waveform to generate a hybrid waveform; and transmit the hybrid waveform for the SGLS. The receiver is configured to receive the hybrid waveform from the transmitter; determine the carrier frequency of the hybrid waveform; separate the first waveform and the second waveform of the hybrid waveform; perform, based on the carrier frequency, a DSB demodulation on the first waveform to obtain a first demodulated signal; and perform, based on the carrier frequency, an SSB demodulation on the second waveform to obtain a second demodulated signal.
Another aspect of the present disclosure provides a hybrid modulation method. The hybrid modulation method includes inputting a hybrid signal of a space-ground link system (SGLS), the hybrid signal including a first component and a second component; performing a double sideband (DSB) modulation on the first component of the hybrid signal using a carrier frequency to obtain a first waveform; performing a single sideband (SSB) modulation on the second component of the hybrid signal using the carrier frequency to obtain a second waveform; and mixing the first waveform and the second waveform to generate a hybrid waveform for the SGLS with reduced bandwidth and improved spectrum efficiency.
Another aspect of the present disclosure provides a hybrid demodulation method. The hybrid demodulation method includes receiving a hybrid waveform of a space-ground link system (SGLS); determining a carrier frequency of the hybrid waveform; obtaining a first waveform by passing the received hybrid waveform through a first bandpass filter and a second waveform by passing the received hybrid waveform through a second bandpass filter; performing, based on the carrier frequency, a double sideband (DSB) on the first waveform to obtain a first demodulated signal; and performing, based on the carrier frequency, a single sideband (SSB) demodulation on the second waveform to obtain a second demodulated signal.
Other aspects of the present disclosure can be understood by those skilled in the art in light of the description, the claims, and the drawings of the present disclosure.
The following drawings are merely examples for illustrative purposes according to various disclosed embodiments and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.
Reference will now be made in detail to exemplary embodiments of the disclosure, which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or similar parts.
The space-ground link subsystem (SGLS) is a subsystem used as a prime source of tracking, telemetry data, and command and control capability in support-of satellite programs which are serviced by the Air Force Satellite Control Network (AFSCN). The original standard SGLS uplink waveform includes three components, e.g., telemetry, command, and ranging.
The telemetry data, x 1(t), is defined as x1(t)=d(t)sin (2πƒd1t), where d(t) is ±1 and fd1 is the telemetry subcarrier frequency. A typical value of fd1 is 1.25 MHz.
The command signal adopts a PCM/FSK/AM modulation scheme. The command data are first frequency-shift keyed (FSK) onto three possible sinusoidal frequency tones, and then amplitude modulated (AM) using a triangular subcarrier waveform to shape up the envelope. The three frequency tones are at 65 KHz, 76 KHz, and 95 KHz when the command rate is 1 Kbps or 2 Kbps. The command data x2(t) is formulated as,
where ƒhd sck∈{65 kHz, 76 kHz, 95 kHz} and Pcmd(t) is unit square pulses with Tcmd=1/Rcmd, Rcmd is the command data rate, m(t) denotes the triangular sub-carrier waveform, and K is usually set to be 0.5.
The standard SGLS ranging signal is a pseudorandom noise (PSN) sequence. The definition is denoted as,
where dkr=±1 is the PN ranging code and Pr(t) is unit square pulses with Tr=1/Rc, Rc, is the chip rate.
The uplink SGLS signal could be described as xDSB(t)=√{square root over (2PT)}cos(2πƒct+g(t)+ϕc), where PT is the total transmitted power (for the simplicity purpose, √{square root over (2PT )}is set as 1 in the present disclosure), ϕc is the initial carrier phase, ƒc is the carrier frequency, g(t) is the combination of the three signals, including telemetry, command and ranging data. It could be expressed as g(t)=β1x1(t)+β2x2(t)+β3x3(t), where βi is the modulation index and has different values for the signals. For example, the typical values are β1=1.1 rad, β2=0.3 rad and β3=0.3 rad. The phase modulation used for SGLS signal is a DSB modulation, which contains two parts in the modulated signal, e.g., the lower sideband (LSB) and upper sideband (USB).
The SSB waveform for SGLS may be denoted by
xSSB(t)=Re ((g(t)+j·ĝ(t)) exp(j·(2πƒct+ϕc))) (3)
where ĝ(t) is the Hilbert transform of g(t). Re(·) is the operator to return the real part of a complex number. In one embodiment, the transmission power is assumed to be 1. To compare the SSB with DSB, the DSB modulation may be rewritten as
xDSB(t)=Re(exp(j·(2πƒct+g(t)+ϕc))) (4)
The present disclosure provides a hybrid modulation method. The method adopts a hybrid modulation (HM) process to keep the original double sideband command signal while generating single sideband telemetry and ranging signals, and accordingly, the method adopts a hybrid demodulation process to recover the command signal, the telemetry signal, and the ranging signal. The reason of maintaining the original command signal is to let the satellite demodulate the command data without updating the onboard processing capabilities. The idea of HM is to enable the original command signal modulation structure while applying the single sideband waveform to the telemetry data signal and the ranging signal.
gHM_SSB(t)=β1x1(t)+β3x3(t) (5)
gHM_DSB(t)=β2x2(t) (6)
Baseband(DSB)=ej[g(t)] (7)
Passband(DSB)=Re{Baseband(DSB)·ej[ωct+øc]} (8)
Baseband (HM)=[gHM_SSB(t)+j ĝHM_SSB(t)]+ej[gHM_DSB (t)] (9)
Passband (HM)=Re{Baseband(HM)·ej[ωct+ϕc]} (10)
The fundamental difference of the hybrid modulation and the aforementioned SSB modulation is maintaining the DSB of the command signal.
Carrier tracking is one of the major issues of demodulating the HM signals, especially when there exist Doppler shifts within the space and ground links. In view of the obtained results, a Costas Loop is designed based on the ranging signals. In the case that there is no ranging data, transmitting a power-reduced pilot tone may be necessary for transmitting the carrier information. In both cases, the same Costas Loop may be adopted.
When the Costas loop is implemented using a computer, the frequency and phase update laws (the shaded area in
ek+1=2sign(Ik+1)Qk+1 (11)
Xk+1=Ik2k+1−Qk+12 (12)
Yk+1=Ik+1Qk+1 (13)
ƒk+1=XkYk+1−Xk+1Yk (14)
{circumflex over (θ)}k+1={circumflex over (θ)}k+{circumflex over (ω)}kT+c1ek (15)
{circumflex over (ω)}k+1={circumflex over (ω)}k+c2ek+d1ƒk (16)
where c1=√{square root over (2)}ωnT, c2=ωn2T,
ωn=1.89BL is the loop corner frequency in terms of noise bandwidth for the Costas loop, ωnF=4BLF is the loop corner frequency in terms of noise bandwidth for the AFC, and T is the sampling interval.
In one example, to evaluate the tracking performance, a case with increasing then decreasing carrier frequencies is simulated.
The received signal for the DSB phase modulation may be (for the illustration purpose, the channel fading and noises are ignored)
yDSB(t)=Re(exp(j·(2πƒct+g(t)=ϕc))) (17)
Moreover, a complex variable may be defined for DSB:
YDSB(t)=yDSB(t)+jHilbert(yDSB(t)) (18)
For a limited bandwidth signal g(t), and a high enough carrier frequency, the exp(j·(2πƒct+g(t)+ϕc)) may be an analytic signal (e.g., a complex-valued function that has no negative frequency components). Based on the properties of Hilbert transform,
YDSB(t)=exp(j·(2πƒct+g(t)+ϕc)) (19)
with the assumption of perfect carrier synchronization,
gDSB(t)=Angle[YDSB(t)e −j(2πƒct+ϕc)] (20)
where the operator Angle computes the angle of a complex number.
Based on the modulation structures shown in
ySSB(t)=Re((g(t)+j·ĝ(t))exp(j·(2πƒct+ϕc))). (21)
Similarly, a complex variable may be defined for SSB:
YSSB(t)=ySSB(t)+jHilbert(ySSB(t)) (22)
Since (g(t)+j·ĝ(t)) may be an analytic signal,
YSSB(t)=[g(t)+jĝ(t)]ej[2πƒct+ϕ] (23)
with the assumption of perfect carrier synchronization,
gSSB(t)=Re [YSSB(t)e−j(2πƒct+ϕc] (24)
where the operator Re returns the real part of a complex number.
The present disclosure also provides a hybrid demodulation method. The hybrid demodulation method may be used to demodulate the hybrid waveform obtained using the disclosed hybrid modulation method. According to the disclosed hybrid modulation method, the original double sideband waveform is kept for command signals while a single sideband waveform is generated for telemetry and ranging signals. Therefore, to demodulate the hybrid waveform obtained through the hybrid modulation process, a hybrid demodulation process may be adopted. For example, the command data may be recovered through a DSB demodulation process, and the telemetry data and the ranging data may be recovered through an SSB demodulation process.
In one embodiment, the distance between the satellite and the ground station may be determined by measuring the round-trip path delay of the signal transmitted to the satellite and received at the ground station.
The last data to be demodulated is the telemetry.
Further, numerical simulations are performed to demonstrate the implementation of the disclosed hybrid modulation and hybrid demodulation for telemetry, command and ranging signals in SGLS. In these simulations, the carrier frequency is set to 10 Mhz and the sampling frequency is set to 80 Mhz. Further, HM signals may be generated, and the HM signals may go through an AWGN channel with noises added during the test according to different application needs. At the receiver side, carrier frequency and phase tracking may be performed based on the Costas Loop described above, then the hybrid demodulation may be performed to recover the SGLS data. During the simulation, each frame runs 2 ms.
For the telemetry data, the data rate is 32 kb/s, the telemetry bits per frame is 64, and each telemetry bit has 2500 samples. Further, for the telemetry data, SNR and Eb/No may satisfy the follow equation:
where σr is the range determination accuracy with the unit of meters, ƒcl is the clock frequency, S/N0 is the carrier signal to noise ratio, BL is the bandwidth of the Phase-Locked Loop bandwidth, and αis 2 for square-wave and 1 for sinewave ranging clock.
According to the disclosed method for hybrid modulation and demodulation, a hybrid modulation structure is designed to combine the SSB modulation and the DSB modulation for SGLS, such that power consumption and spectral usage can be saved without hardware and software upgrades on satellites. Compared to a DSB waveform, the hybrid waveform obtained by the disclosed method cut the required bandwidth in half, while giving the same bit error rate (BER) performance. Further, the implementation losses associated with the disclosed hybrid modulation-demodulation processes are negligible, which demonstrates the feasibility of SSB in SGLS.
The present disclosure provides a hybrid modulation method.
In one embodiment, the hybrid signal may be a baseband signal of a space-ground link system (SGLS), the first component of the hybrid signal may include a command signal, and the second component of the hybrid signal may include a telemetry signal and a ranging signal. For the details of applying the hybrid modulation method to modulate the command signal, the telemetry signal, and the ranging signal, reference may be made to the embodiments described above.
In one embodiment, prior to transmitting the hybrid waveform (S150), the hybrid modulation method may further include passing the mixed waveform of the first waveform and the second waveform through a passband filter to generate the hybrid waveform (e.g., the hybrid waveform is a passband signal). Therefore, when transmitting the hybrid waveform, the passband signal may be transmitted.
The present disclosure also provides a hybrid demodulation method to recover the modulated hybrid signal.
In one embodiment, the first demodulated signal may include a command signal, the method may further include identifying subcarrier frequencies from the first demodulated signal. For example, the subcarrier frequencies for the command signal may include 65 KHz, 76 KHz, and 96 KHz, and the subcarrier frequencies may be determined according to one of the following three methods: finding peaks in FFT plots; frequency tracking by a Costas loop; and signal matching based on frequency correlation. In one embodiment, the method may further include determining the command data corresponding to each subcarrier frequency.
In one embodiment, the second demodulated signal may include a telemetry signal and a ranging signal, and the method may further include passing the second demodulated signal through a low pass filter to recover the ranging data. For example, a first component of the second demodulated signal may be the output of the low pass filter (with a characteristic frequency of 1 MHz, e.g., signals with a frequency higher than 1 MHz will be blocked by the low pass filter), and hard limits may be applied to the first component of the second demodulated signal to obtain the ranging data. In one embodiment, the ranging data may include pseudorandom noise for ranging.
Moreover, the method may also include passing the second demodulated signal through a third bandpass filter to obtain a second component of the second demodulated signal; performing a binary phase shift keying (BPSK) demodulation on the second component of the second demodulated signal to obtain a BPSK demodulated signal; and applying mean and hard limits to the BPSK demodulated signal to obtain the telemetry data. In one embodiment, the third bandpass filter may allow signals in a frequency range near the subcarrier frequency of the telemetry signal. For example, the subcarrier frequency of the telemetry signal is 1.25 MHz, and the third bandpass filter may allow signals in a frequency range of approximately 1.20 MHz to 1.30 MHz to pass through.
According to the disclosed hybrid modulation and demodulation methods, a hybrid modulation structure is designed to combine the SSB modulation and the DSB modulation for SGLS, such that power consumption and spectral usage can be saved without hardware and software upgrades on satellites. Compared to a DSB waveform, the hybrid waveform obtained by the disclosed method cut the required bandwidth in half, while giving the same bit error rate (BER) performance. Further, the implementation losses associated with the disclosed hybrid modulation-demodulation processes are negligible, which demonstrates the feasibility of SSB in SGLS.
The present disclosure also provides a system for hybrid modulation and demodulation.
Referring to
In one embodiment, the hybrid signal may be a baseband signal of an SGLS, the first component of the hybrid signal may include a command signal, and the second component of the hybrid signal may include a telemetry signal and a ranging signal. Accordingly, the transmitter may be configured to perform the DSB modulation on the command signal and perform the SSB modulation on the telemetry signal and the ranging signal. For the details of the modulation of the baseband signal, reference may be made to the embodiments described above.
In one embodiment, the transmitter may include a first receiving device, a DSB modulator, an SSB modulator, and a mixer. The first receiving device may be configured to receive the hybrid signal including the first component and the second component. The DSB modulator may be configured to receive the first component of the hybrid signal from the first receiving device and perform a DSB modulation on the first component of the hybrid signal using the carrier frequency to obtain the first waveform. The SSB modulator may be configured to receive the second component of the hybrid signal from the first receiving device and perform an SSB modulation on the second component of the hybrid signal using the carrier frequency to obtain the second waveform. The mixer may be configured to receive and mix the first waveform and the second waveform to generate the hybrid waveform. The mixer may also be configured to transmit the hybrid waveform for the SGLS.
In one embodiment, the mixer may include a passband filter, and after mixing the first waveform and the second wave form, the mixer may be configured to generate the hybrid waveform by filtering the mixed waveform using the passband filter. Therefore, the hybrid waveform may be a passband signal.
The receiver may be configured to receive the transmitted hybrid waveform; determine the carrier frequency of the hybrid waveform; separate the first waveform and the second waveform of the hybrid waveform; perform, based on the carrier frequency, a DSB demodulation on the first waveform to obtain a first demodulated signal; perform, based on the carrier frequency, an SSB demodulation on the second waveform to obtain a second demodulated signal. In one embodiment, to determine the carrier frequency of the hybrid waveform, the receiver may be configured to track the carrier frequency and phase of the received hybrid waveform, and the carrier frequency used in the DSB demodulation and the SSB demodulation may be the carrier frequency tracked by the receiver.
In one embodiment, the receiver may include a second receiving device, a first bandpass filter, a second bandpass filter, a DSB demodulator, and an SSB demodulator. The second receiving device may be configured to receive the transmitted hybrid waveform. The first bandpass filter may be configured to filter the hybrid waveform to obtain the first waveform. The second bandpass filter may be configured to filter the hybrid waveform to obtain the second waveform. The DSB demodulator may be configured to receive the first waveform of the hybrid waveform and perform, based on the carrier frequency, a DSB demodulation on the first waveform to obtain the first demodulated signal. The SSB demodulator may be configured to receive the second waveform of the hybrid waveform and perform, based on the carrier frequency, an SSB demodulation on the second waveform to obtain the second demodulated signal.
In one embodiment, the receiver may further include a Costas loop, and the Costas loop may be configured to track the carrier frequency and phase of the hybrid waveform. The tracked carrier frequency may be used by the DSB demodulator and the SSB demodulator to respectively obtain the first demodulated signal and the second demodulated signal.
In one embodiment, the first demodulated signal may include a command signal, the receiver may further include a frequency identifier, configured to identify subcarrier frequencies from the first demodulated signal. For example, the subcarrier frequencies for the command signal may include 65 KHz, 76 KHz, and 96 KHz, and the subcarrier frequencies may be determined according to one of the following three methods: finding peaks in FFT plots; frequency tracking by a Costas loop; and signal matching based on frequency correlation. Further, the receiver may include a command-data analyzer, configured to determine the command data corresponding to each subcarrier frequency.
In one embodiment, the second demodulated signal may include a telemetry signal and a ranging signal, and the receiver may further include a low pass filter, and the low pass filter may be configured to allow a first component of the second demodulated signal to pass through. For example, the low pass filter may allow signals with a frequency under 1 MHz to pass through. Further, the receiver may include a first regulator, configured to apply hard limits to the first component of the second demodulated signal and obtain the ranging data. In one embodiment, the ranging data may include pseudorandom noise for ranging.
Moreover, the receiver may also include a third bandpass filter, and the third bandpass filter may be configured to allow a second component of the second demodulated signal to pass through. In one embodiment, the subcarrier frequency of the telemetry signal is 1.25 MHz, and the third bandpass filter may allow signals in a frequency range of approximately 1.20 MHz to 1.30 MHz to pass through. Further, the receiver may also include a BPSK demodulator, configured to perform a BPSK demodulation on the second component of the second demodulated signal; and a second regulator, configured to apply mean and hard limits to the output of the BPSK demodulator to obtain the telemetry data.
According to the disclosed system for hybrid modulation and demodulation, a hybrid modulation structure is designed to combine the SSB modulation and the DSB modulation for SGLS, such that power consumption and spectral usage can be saved without hardware and software upgrades on satellites. Compared to DSB waveforms, the hybrid waveforms obtained by the disclosed method cut the required bandwidth in half, while giving the same bit error rate (BER) performance. Further, the implementation losses associated with the disclosed hybrid modulation-demodulation processes are negligible, which demonstrates the feasibility of SSB in SGLS.
Other embodiments of the disclosure will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the claims.
This invention was made with Government support under Contracts No. FA9453-15-C-0401 and No. FA9453-18-C-0005, awarded by the United States Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL). The U.S. Government has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20200266853 | Strobel | Aug 2020 | A1 |
Entry |
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Dan Shen, “SSB and DSB Enabled Hybrid Waveforms for the Space-Ground Link System” IEEE, Nov. 1, 2019 (Year: 2019). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220247443 A1 | Aug 2022 | US |