This United States non-provisional application for patent is a national application being filed under 35 U.S.C. 371 and claiming the benefit of and priority to Israeli application serial number 181400 filed on 18 Feb. 2007, through the Patent Cooperation Treaty Filing having an international publication number of WO2008/099410 (PCT/IL2008/000208) and having an international filing date of 18 Feb. 2008.
The present application claims priority from the patent application No. 181400 filed in Israel on 18 Feb. 2007 by the same applicant and having the same title.
This invention related to communication improvement system and method and more specifically to Doppler correction.
In communication systems, wherein a Mobile Subscriber MS is on the move, the frequency varies according to Doppler effect, as it communicates with a Base Station BS.
It is desired to estimate and correct the Doppler effect, and other effects as well which result in frequency error—and reduce communications systems performance.
In many communication protocols, such as 802.16e or WiMAX, there are several frequency carriers and/or subcarriers, at some frequencies and distanced apart.
In S-WiMAX and some other communication protocols and systems, the carrier spacing may be reduced, such as about 2 KHz. In such cases the expected Doppler shift (e.g. 200 Hz) might be too large to be left uncompensated and may affect performance, thus it may be required to compensate for this effect. Doppler shifts may be compensated at the MS and/or at the BS.
According to the new invention, it may be possible to further distinguish different factors of frequency variation. Thus, the effect of some of these factors may be reduced, if taken into account as separate factors.
This new invention may be implemented using standard existing hardware means, such as by updating the MS and/or BS software.
This invention may provide means to better estimate and correct the Doppler effect, and perform such estimates over time Frequency errors caused by other effects may be reduced as well—and the overall frequency error, both in BS and MS, may be reduced—allowing better usage of the spectrum, and less interference between adjacent carriers and/or sub carriers and/or frequencies.
Thus, setting a more precise frequency, using corrections in transmitting and/or receiving, at the BS and/or at the MS, may improve communications.
This may be more important in S-WiMAX, WiMAX systems with satellite communications, or similar systems or protocols.
Since in S-WiMAX the carrier spacing may be small, such as about 2 KHz, it may become important to reduce an expected 200 Hz Doppler shift, thus reducing interferes to other adjacent signals and/or data, reducing noise and improving communications speed, and decreasing BER.
According to the new invention, Doppler shifts may be compensated at the MS and/or at the BS, while taking into account additional factors.
The present invention will be described by way of example, and with reference to the accompanying drawings.
As a MS moves in a velocity V, Doppler frequency shifts may occur in the Up Link UL 13 from the MS to the BS, and in the Down Link DL 14, from the BS to the MS.
Communications 15 between the MS 12 and the satellite 11, and/or communications 16 between the BS 17 and the satellite 11, may be initiated as well.
In a preferred embodiment, compensation is implemented at the MS, in order to synchronize on the received DL carrier frequency. Once such synchronization is achieved at the MS, UL transmission may be performed with identical frequency compensation. By communicating between the MS and BS, using Pilots and/or other signals at the UL and DL, it is possible to distinguish the clock mismatch from the Doppler shift, since the Doppler shift is likewise for both directions of communications. Measurements and estimations may be performed by hardware means, wherein data is provided to the communication system—or is used in such a manner to correct transmitted and/or received frequencies accordingly.
In case smaller carrier-spacing between carriers and/or sub-carriers 21 is used, such as when a 2 KHz carrier-spacing is used, Doppler shifts may affect performance, such as may be the case in S-WiMAX wherein smaller carrier-spacing approximately 2 KHz may be more vulnerable to the expected 200 Hz Doppler shift 22, and relevant signals should be frequency compensated.
This method or any parts of it can be repeated, such as at the i-th UL subframe, where the MS applies an updated Doppler compensation, {circumflex over (f)}D(i), which satisfies {circumflex over (f)}D(i)=fT(i−1)−{circumflex over (f)}C. This compensation may offer improved frequency compensation abilities, such as by obtaining fT(i−1) from the previous DL subframe.
Preferably, this method involves both the MS and the BS, allowing the estimation of the Doppler shift and its compensation at the MS. Constant updates and estimations may be implemented as part of regular DL and UL transmissions between the BS and the MS, both for measuring the received signals and for providing indicative data.
In a preferred embodiment, mismatch estimation is performed once in about 50 frames, for estimations updates. The period may be determined by the bandwidth of the clock-mismatch process.
It may be possible to perform an equivalent and/or similar method for improved Doppler estimations by using different calculations at the BS and/or MS, by making different transmissions, or by sending different parameters.
As a system and/or method are used, upon initiating compensation approach, the MS may not be able to distinguish between the two mentioned components of {circumflex over (f)}T: fC and fD.
Thus, it may be possible to perform a frequency compensation for the UL, such as may be used in the WiMAX standard. At the first transmission it may be possible to estimate the Doppler shift experienced at the BS during the UL. Since the number of pilots in regular S-WiMAX UL transmission may imply low processing gain and poor performance, hence inaccurate Doppler shift estimation, the first UL transmission can be composed solely of pilot sub carriers, such as detailed in
A method, based on the simulation results includes the following steps:
The figure details possible results for the Doppler estimation error at the BS.
In some embodiments, as demonstrated in the simulation, it is possible to use one or more pilots UL subframes.
The results are given in terms of standard-deviation (STD) of the Doppler estimation method at the BS.
The STD may decrease with the SNR and with the number of aggregated UL subframes at hand.
Thus, the STD of the Doppler estimation error, such as with SNR of 1 dB and a single UL subframe, can be smaller than 25 Hz, which in this example is one percent of the carrier spacing. This may be sufficient for valid decoding of the UL signals.
In some embodiments, possible changes to the 802.16e Standard may be made, in order to implement the UL Doppler correction mechanism:
a. Inclusion of the first pilot only UL transmission, such as described with reference to
b. Inclusion of the DL Doppler shift message, such as described with reference to
In case of Hand-Off HO from the Terrestrial BS, a novel method may be used similarly to the method of
In case of HO from a terrestrial WiMAX BS to a satellite linked BS, the method's steps may be altered using the following steps, or in a combination thereof:
It will be recognized that the foregoing is but one example of a system and method within the scope of the present invention, and that various modifications will occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the disclosure set forth hereinbefore.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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181400 | Feb 2007 | IL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL2008/000208 | 2/18/2008 | WO | 00 | 8/3/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2008/099410 | 8/21/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7579983 | Matsumoto | Aug 2009 | B2 |
7787358 | Wilhelmsson et al. | Aug 2010 | B2 |
20080075056 | Thome | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20090279476 | Li et al. | Nov 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100290356 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |