The invention relates to a method for operating a mobile radio system, a mobile radio system, a mobile station and a device for determining a sub-group of adjacent radio cells in a mobile radio system.
Cellular mobile radio systems generally have a large number of respectively adjacent radio cells, each covered by a base station. One base station with directional sector antennae can also cover a plurality of radio cells. Mobile stations in one of the radio cells generally communicate with the base station of the relevant radio cell. If however the transmission capacities of the respective base station are exhausted, or if the transmission quality to the base station is impaired, because for example the mobile station is at the edge of the respective radio cell and therefore relatively far away from the base station, or if the mobile station changes location to an adjacent radio cell, it is necessary for communication to be set up between the mobile station and a new base station of one of the adjacent radio cells. In order to decide the new base station with which or new radio cell in which communication is to be set up with the mobile station, the mobile station generally receives signals transmitted on the control channels of all adjacent base stations and analyzes their receive quality. A decision can then be made on the basis of these measurement results as to the new base station with which the mobile station should establish communication.
Known cellular mobile radio systems currently operate for example according to the GSM (Global System of Mobile Communication) standard or will operate in future according to the third generation standard UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications Standard). There is often provision when the mobile station changes from a first radio cell to an adjacent cell for the signals of all the base stations adjacent to the first radio cell to be measured.
One possible object is to improve implementation of the measurement of signals from base stations in adjacent cells, as implemented for example before the implementation of a cell change by a mobile station.
The inventors propose to operate a mobile radio system with at least a first radio cell and a plurality of radio cells adjacent to the first radio cell, covered respectively by a base station, a sub-group of the adjacent radio cells is determined as a function of the position of a mobile station within the first radio cell and the mobile station then implements measurements of a quality parameter of signals of the base stations of just this sub-group of the adjacent radio cells.
The sub-group of the adjacent radio cells can thereby be selected such that for the specific position within the first radio cell the signals received from its base stations have a better receive quality than signals originating from the base stations of the other adjacent radio cells, which do not belong to the sub-group. The sub-group can therefore be determined in advance (i.e. before implementation of the measurements by the mobile station) by corresponding sample measurements at the specific position. The signals of all adjacent radio cells are analyzed for these sample measurements, allowing the sub-group of the adjacent radio cells with the best measurement results to be determined.
The results of the sample measurements are used to determine the sub-groups. Corresponding sub-group information for each sub-group can be stored in a network-side component.
The sub-group can however also be defined irrespective of measurement results additionally or solely based on network planning considerations. This prevents an adjacent radio cell being assigned to the sub-group, for which good receive conditions result by chance beforehand at the respective position within the first radio cell but which are unsuitable for any cell change (handover) to be implemented.
The method and device have the advantage that the number of measurements to be implemented is limited to the radio cells of the sub-group and not all the adjacent radio cells have to be measured. This allows a reduction in the time required for the measurements and the computation outlay. As the signals of a plurality of adjacent cells can generally only be measured one after the other, the method and device allow the entire measuring process to be shortened. Also the power consumption of the mobile station implementing the measurements is reduced. In an extreme instance the sub-group may only contain one of the adjacent radio cells.
The adjacent radio cells may belong to the same mobile radio network as the first radio cell. It is also possible for them to belong to another mobile radio network (in some instances of another network operator). In this case the mobile radio system is formed by both mobile radio networks. Their radio cells can be overlaid locally on each other. The two mobile radio networks can be operated according to different standards, e.g. GSM and UMTS.
It is also possible (irrespective of whether the radio cells belong to the same or different networks) for the first radio cell and the adjacent radio cells to be operated in different frequency ranges. They may however also be operated in the same frequency range.
The sizes of the radio cells can be the same or different.
The method and device can advantageously be used when implementing measurements in preparation for a cell change by the mobile station (handover).
“Position” refers to a local area, of specific extension. The first radio cell can therefore be sub-divided into two or more sub-areas, the sub-group of the adjacent radio cells being defined for one of these sub-areas.
The method includes the instance where a plurality of radio cells is covered by a common base station, which covers the radio cells as spatially separated sectors with directional antennae. The base station transmits different signals for each of these radio cells.
The quality parameter defined by the mobile station for the signals received by the mobile station from the adjacent base stations can for example be received power or signal to noise ratio. Other parameters can also be considered, in particular those which can influence a decision about a cell change.
According to a development, another sub-group of the adjacent radio cells is determined in each instance for the measurements to be implemented before the measurements are implemented for different positions of mobile stations within the first radio cell. When the first radio cell is sub-divided into geographical sub-areas this allows an individual sub-group of the adjacent radio cells to be assigned to each sub-area for the measurements to be implemented, it being possible to determine each sub-group such that in the respective sub-area the signals of its base stations provide better measurement results from the mobile station than is the case for the other adjacent cells.
According to a development the base station of the first radio cell transmits sub-group information to the mobile station, which is used to determine the sub-group of the adjacent radio cells. In this way the mobile station is informed which adjacent cells belong to the sub-group for which the mobile station is to implement measurements.
According to a development the sub-group information specifies another sub-group of the adjacent radio cells in each instance for different possible positions of mobile stations in the radio cell. The mobile stations determine their actual position within the first radio cell and then identify the sub-group from the position determined and the sub-group information obtained. This allows independent selection by the mobile station of the sub-group of relevance to it from the sub-group information communicated based on the position determined automatically by the mobile station. The position can for example be determined by a GPS receiver of the mobile station.
According to an alternative embodiment the actual position of the mobile station is determined. The sub-group information is then generated taking into account the determined position and transmitted from the base station of the first radio cell to the mobile station. The position of the mobile station can thereby be determined by the base station by known position determining methods, which are known to the person skilled in the art. Examples of these are triangulation methods, implemented for example according to the OTDOA (Observed Time Difference Of Arrival) method.
The base station of the first radio cell can use a directional antenna to transmit the sub-group information. It is then possible to transmit sub-group information in different directions for different sub-groups respectively. All mobile stations, which receive such directional sub-group information, then only measure the signals of the adjacent radio cells of the sub-group communicated to them in each instance. The transmission direction for the respective sub-group information must therefore correspond to the sub-area, for which the respective sub-group was determined beforehand.
According to a development two groups of respectively adjacent radio cells are overlaid locally on each other in the mobile radio system, the first radio cell belonging to the first group and the sub-group of the radio cells adjacent to it belonging to the second group. The mobile station implements measurements of a quality parameter for signals from the base stations of at least some of the immediately adjacent radio cells of the first group in the first radio cell. It is then ascertained which of these adjacent radio cells of the first group gives the best measurement results for the current position of the mobile station. This can either be done by the mobile station itself or by a network-side component, which informs the mobile station of the measurement results. The sub-group of radio cells of the second group is then determined on the basis of the radio cells of the first group with the best measurement results. The mobile station then implements measurements of the quality parameter of the signals of the base stations of just this sub-group of the adjacent cells of the second group.
The sub-group of the adjacent radio cells of the second group is thus determined in the described manner on the basis of measurements of signals from radio cells of the first group. It is possible to assign to the sub-group for example those radio cells of the second group, which are at a defined distance from the radio cells of the first group with the best measurement results. This development is particularly advantageous, when the radio cells of the first group are operated in a different frequency range and/or belong to a different mobile radio network from the radio cells of the second group. In the event of an anticipated cell change (handover) only the signals of the radio cells in the same frequency range or in the same mobile radio network are then generally measured. If however in the event of a cell change the change is to a radio cell of the second group, the measurement results of the signals of the first group can advantageously be used to reduce the number of measurements to be implemented of signals from the radio cells of the second group.
According to a development the radio cells of the second group are smaller than the radio cells of the first group. This means that in the event of a cell change from the first radio cell to a radio cell of the second group, a larger number of signals are present from the adjacent base stations than in the event of a cell change to a radio cell of the first group. The smaller number of signals of the adjacent radio cells of the first group can therefore be measured, to use the measurement results thus obtained in the described fashion to determine the sub-group of the radio cells of the second group, so that only the signals of the sub-group of the second group of radio cells have to be evaluated by the mobile station.
The mobile radio system, the mobile station for a mobile radio system and the device for determining a sub-group of adjacent radio cells for a mobile radio system have the components required to implement the method.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout.
A possible implementation of these measurements at the measurement points M is described with reference to
In addition to each measurement point M,
The preparation for a cell change by a mobile station MS from the first radio cell C1 to one of the adjacent radio cells C2 to C7 is described below. According to
According to
In a different embodiment the mobile station MS, MS′ can also determine its position itself, for example using a GPS receiver. The base station BS1 can then transmit the same sub-group information PI to all the mobile stations MS, MS′, from which different sub-groups can be derived for different sub-areas of or positions in the first radio cell C1. Each mobile station MS, MS′ can then use its own position within the sub-group information as determined by it to identify the sub-group of significance for it.
With yet another embodiment it is also possible for neither the first base station BS1 nor the mobile stations MS, MS′ to have to have knowledge of the position of the mobile station. Instead the first base station BS1 transmits the respectively tailored information into the sub-areas of the first radio cell C1 corresponding to the respective different sub-groups of the adjacent radio cells C2 to C7 by a directional antenna, the sub-group information serving to identify the corresponding sub-group.
The first base station BS1 in
The mobile station MS in
Each radio cell CI to CXVII of the second group is in turn assigned a base station BSI, BSII . . . , of which only the first two are shown in
The radio cells CI to CXVII of the second group are overlaid locally on the radio cells C1 to C7 of the first group.
The corresponding sub-group P2 to P7 in
With UMTS-FDD, so-called compressed mode is used to measure radio cells which operate in a different frequency range from the radio cell in which the mobile station is currently located. In compressed mode the data transmission has to be interrupted periodically to set the receiver to the other frequencies and to measure the adjacent cells. There is therefore less time available for actual data transmission. Also measurement of signals from potential destination cells takes a certain time, thereby delaying the cell change, which may be urgently required. While the measurement of adjacent cells operating in the same frequency range as the current cell can be implemented temporally parallel to the receipt of data, when measuring potential destination cells, which operate in a different frequency range or belong to another mobile radio network, the receipt of data must be interrupted. The method and device can reduce the length of the interruption.
The sub-groups P2 to P7 from
With other exemplary embodiments the sub-group information PI can also specify a specific selection rule for the sub-group of the adjacent radio cells to be measured. Such rules might for example be: “If radio cell A is the best within the first group, cells B and C of the second group should be measured” or “If cell A of the first group is the best cell, cells B and C of the second group should not be measured”. These rules can for example be signaled in the neighbor cell information list of the measurement control or in the neighbor cell information list of a system information block according to the UMTS-FDD standard.
It is also possible for the mobile station MS to determine the strongest adjacent cell C2 to C7 of the first group and inform the first base station BS1 of this, whereupon the corresponding adjacent cells of the sub-group to be measured are selected by the base station or a central unit within the mobile radio system based on this communication. In other words the sub-group to be measured is selected and signaled on the network side.
It is also possible for the mobile station MS to be informed by the sub-group information PI of the sequence in which the adjacent cells are to be measured. The sub-groups assigned to the possible positions of the mobile station MS can also be updated, in that the mobile station MS responds if it identifies an error in the assignment of a radio cell to the sub-group. If the first base station BS1 for example instructs the mobile station MS1 to measure three radio cells of a specific sub-group but the mobile station MS1 can only receive two of these radio cells, it informs the system of this, so that the radio cell that cannot be received is removed from the corresponding sub-group in future.
A further possible rule, of which the mobile station MS can be informed by the sub-group information PI, is: “If cells A and B of the first group are the strongest cells and cell C of the first group is the weakest cell, cell D of the second group 1 should be selected as the adjacent cell of the sub-group to be measured”.
With the second exemplary embodiment the position of the mobile station MS is determined indirectly by the mobile station itself. It determines the strongest adjacent cell C2 to C7 of the first group and then uses the sub-group information PI communicated to it by the first base station BS to determine the sub-group P2 to P7 of the second group of radio cells CI to CXVII to be measured. As the strongest adjacent cell of the first group C2 to C7 differs as a function of location for the respective position of the mobile station MS, with the second exemplary embodiment ascertaining the strongest adjacent cell involves indirect determination of the position of the mobile station MS. With the second exemplary embodiment therefore position determination by the first base station BS1 or using another position determining method (for example by a GPS receiver) is not required in the mobile station MS.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred embodiments thereof and examples, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention covered by the claims which may include the phrase “at least one of A, B and C” or a similar phrase as an alternative expression that means one or more of A, B and C may be used, contrary to the holding in Superguide v. DIRECTV, 69 USPQ2d 1865 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10245118.4 | Sep 2002 | DE | national |
This application is based on and hereby claims priority to PCT Application No. PCT/EP2003/009706 filed on Sep. 1, 2003 and German Application No. 102 45 118.4 filed on Sep. 27, 2002, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/09706 | 9/1/2003 | WO | 3/28/2005 |