The present disclosure relates generally to communications devices, infrastructure equipment and methods of operating communications devices and infrastructure equipment.
The present disclosure claims the Paris Convention priority to European Patent Application Number 21166488.3, the contents of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The “background” description provided herein is for the purpose of generally presenting the context of the disclosure. Work of the presently named inventors, to the extent it is described in this background section, as well as aspects of the description which may not otherwise qualify as prior art at the time of filing, are neither expressly nor impliedly admitted as prior art against the present invention.
Third and fourth generation mobile telecommunication systems, such as those based on the third generation partnership project (3GPP) defined UMTS and Long Term Evolution (LTE) architectures, are able to support more sophisticated services than simple voice and messaging services offered by previous generations of mobile telecommunication systems. For example, with the improved radio interface and enhanced data rates provided by LTE systems, a user is able to enjoy high data rate applications such as mobile video streaming and mobile video conferencing that would previously only have been available via a fixed line data connection. The demand to deploy such networks is therefore strong and the coverage area of these networks, i.e. geographic locations where access to the networks is possible, may be expected to increase ever more rapidly.
Future wireless communications networks will therefore be expected to routinely and efficiently support communications with a wider range of devices associated with a wider range of data traffic profiles and types than current systems are optimised to support. For example, it is expected that future wireless communications networks will efficiently support communications with devices including reduced complexity devices, machine type communication (MTC) devices, high resolution video displays, virtual reality headsets and so on. Some of these different types of devices may be deployed in very large numbers, for example low complexity devices for supporting the “Internet of Things” (IoT), and may typically be associated with the transmission of relatively small amounts of data with relatively high latency tolerance.
Accordingly, there is expected to be a desire for future wireless communications networks, for example those which may be referred to as 5G or new radio (NR) system/new radio access technology (RAT) systems, as well as future iterations/releases of existing systems, to efficiently support connectivity for a wide range of devices associated with different applications and different characteristic data traffic profiles. There is similarly expected to be a desire for such connectivity to be available over a wide geographic area.
One example area of current interest in this regard includes so-called “non-terrestrial networks”, or NTN for short. The 3GPP has proposed in Release 15 of the 3GPP specifications to develop technologies for providing coverage by means of one or more antennas mounted on an airborne or space-borne vehicle [1].
Non-terrestrial networks may provide service in areas that cannot be covered by terrestrial cellular networks (i.e. those where coverage is provided by means of land-based antennas), such as isolated or remote areas, on board aircraft or vessels, or may provide enhanced service in other areas. The expanded coverage that may be achieved by means of non-terrestrial networks may provide service continuity for machine-to-machine (M2M) or ‘internet of things’ (IoT) devices, or for passengers on board moving platforms (e.g. passenger vehicles such as aircraft, ships, high speed trains, or buses). Other benefits may arise from the use of non-terrestrial networks for providing multicast/broadcast resources for data delivery.
Although NTN networks can provide improved coverage for communications devices, particularly in remote areas, a nature of communications resulting from, for example, a decrease in an amount of time which communications devices spend in a coverage area of an NTN infrastructure equipment can create new challenges that need to be addressed.
The present disclosure can help address or mitigate at least some of the issues discussed above.
According to one aspect, there is described a method of operating a communications device to transmit or to receive via a wireless communications network including non-terrestrial, NTN, infrastructure equipment. The communications device identifies a first in-coverage period during which the communications device can transmit signals to or receive signals from a first NTN infrastructure equipment, the first NTN infrastructure equipment being either carried by a first aerial vehicle or relayed via the first aerial vehicle to or from the first NTN infrastructure equipment as the aerial vehicle passes over the communications device. The communications device identifies a second in-coverage period during which the communications device can transmit signals to or receive signals from either the first NTN infrastructure equipment or a second NTN infrastructure equipment, the second NTN infrastructure equipment being either carried by a second aerial vehicle or the transmitted or the received signal are relayed via the second aerial vehicle to or from the second NTN infrastructure equipment as the second aerial vehicle passes over the communications device. The communications device transmits uplink data to the wireless communications network by adapting a transmission of the uplink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period, based on a length of time required to transmit the uplink data and a start time at which the uplink data can be transmitted in the first in-coverage period with respect to an end of the first in-coverage period, or alternatively, the communications device receives downlink data from the wireless communications network by adapting a reception of the downlink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period, having been transmitted at least partly in the second in-coverage period, based on a length of time required to receive the downlink data and a start time at which the downlink data can be received in the first in-coverage period with respect to an end of the first in-coverage period.
Example embodiments can provide a communications device, which is identifies that an uplink transmission or a downlink reception has a time duration which will exceed a time for which the communications device remains in a current in-coverage period but can be continued in a subsequent in-coverage period provided by either the same NTN infrastructure equipment or another NTN infrastructure equipment. Example embodiments can find application with repeated transmission/received of the same transport block to improve a likelihood of correct communication, which can exceed a remaining duration of an in-coverage period in which the transmission/reception is scheduled.
Respective aspects and features of the present disclosure are defined in the appended claims.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary, but are not restrictive, of the present technology. The described embodiments, together with further advantages, will be best understood by reference to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
A more complete appreciation of the disclosure and many of the attendant advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein like reference numerals designate identical or corresponding parts throughout the several views, and:
Long Term Evolution Advanced Radio Access Technology (4G)
The network 100 includes a plurality of base stations 101 connected to a core network part 102. Each base station provides a coverage area 103 (e.g. a cell) within which data can be communicated to and from communications devices 104. Data is transmitted from the base stations 101 to the communications devices 104 within their respective coverage areas 103 via a radio downlink. Data is transmitted from the communications devices 104 to the base stations 101 via a radio uplink. The core network part 102 routes data to and from the communications devices 104 via the respective base stations 101 and provides functions such as authentication, mobility management, charging and so on. Communications devices may also be referred to as mobile stations, user equipment (UE), user terminals, mobile radios, terminal devices, and so forth. Base stations, which are an example of network infrastructure equipment/network access nodes, may also be referred to as transceiver stations/nodeBs/e-nodeBs (eNB), g-nodeBs (gNB) and so forth. In this regard, different terminology is often associated with different generations of wireless telecommunications systems for elements providing broadly comparable functionality. However, example embodiments of the disclosure may be equally implemented in different generations of wireless telecommunications systems such as 5G or new radio as explained below, and for simplicity certain terminology may be used regardless of the underlying network architecture. That is to say, the use of a specific term in relation to certain example implementations is not intended to indicate these implementations are limited to a certain generation of network that may be most associated with that particular terminology.
New Radio Access Technology (5G NR)
Again, these communications may be over respective wired or wireless links. The distributed units (DUs) 211, 212 are responsible for providing the radio access interface for communications devices connected to the network. Each distributed unit 211, 212 has a coverage area (radio access footprint) 241, 242 where the sum of the coverage areas of the distributed units under the control of a controlling node together define the coverage of the respective communication cells 201, 202. Each distributed unit 211, 212 includes transceiver circuitry for transmission and reception of wireless signals and processor circuitry configured to control the respective distributed units 211, 212.
In terms of broad top-level functionality, the core network component 210 of the new RAT communications network represented in
A communications device or UE 260 is represented in
In the example of
It will further be appreciated that
Thus example embodiments of the disclosure as discussed herein may be implemented in wireless telecommunication systems/networks according to various different architectures, such as the example architectures shown in
In this regard, example embodiments of the disclosure may be described generally in the context of communications between network infrastructure equipment/access nodes and a communications device, wherein the specific nature of the network infrastructure equipment/access node and the communications device will depend on the network infrastructure for the implementation at hand. For example, in some scenarios the network infrastructure equipment/access node may comprise a base station, such as an LTE-type base station 101 as shown in
A more detailed illustration of a communications device 270 and an example network infrastructure equipment 272, which may be thought of as an eNB or a gNB 101 or a combination of a controlling node 221 and TRP 211, is presented in
The infrastructure equipment 272 includes a receiver 282 connected to an antenna 284 and a transmitter 286 connected to the antenna 284. Correspondingly, the communications device 270 includes a controller 290 connected to a receiver 292 which receives signals from an antenna 294 and a transmitter 296 also connected to the antenna 294.
The controller 280 is configured to control the infrastructure equipment 272 and may comprise processor circuitry which may in turn comprise various sub-units/sub-circuits for providing functionality as explained further herein. These sub-units may be implemented as discrete hardware elements or as appropriately configured functions of the processor circuitry. Thus the controller 280 may comprise circuitry which is suitably configured/programmed to provide the desired functionality using conventional programming/configuration techniques for equipment in wireless telecommunications systems. The transmitter 286 and the receiver 282 may comprise signal processing and radio frequency filters, amplifiers and circuitry in accordance with conventional arrangements. The transmitter 286, the receiver 282 and the controller 280 are schematically shown in
Correspondingly, the controller 290 of the communications device 270 is configured to control the transmitter 296 and the receiver 292 and may comprise processor circuitry which may in turn comprise various sub-units/sub-circuits for providing functionality as explained further herein. These sub-units may be implemented as discrete hardware elements or as appropriately configured functions of the processor circuitry. Thus the controller 290 may comprise circuitry which is suitably configured/programmed to provide the desired functionality using conventional programming/configuration techniques for equipment in wireless telecommunications systems. Likewise, the transmitter 296 and the receiver 292 may comprise signal processing and radio frequency filters, amplifiers and circuitry in accordance with conventional arrangements. The transmitter 296, receiver 292 and controller 290 are schematically shown in
The controllers 280, 290 may be configured to carry out instructions which are stored on a computer readable medium, such as a non-volatile memory. The processing steps described herein may be carried out by, for example, a microprocessor in conjunction with a random access memory, which may be non-volatile memory, operating according to instructions stored on a computer readable medium.
Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTNs)
An overview of NR-NTN can be found in [1], and much of the following wording, along with
In an NTN, an aerial vehicle (such as a satellite or aerial platform) may allow a connection of a communications device and a ground station (which may be referred to herein as an NTN gateway). In the present disclosure, the term aerial vehicle is used to refer to a space vehicle, aerial platform, or satellite, or any other entity which moves relative to a communications device and is configured to communicate with the communications device. In particular, an aerial vehicle may be in some embodiments a low earth orbit (LEO) satellite, a medium earth orbit (MEO) satellite, a high altitude platform system (HAPS), a balloon or a drone for example. As will be explained below, the aerial vehicle is configured to communicate with the communications device and the ground station of a terrestrial network by means of non-communications circuitry of the aerial vehicle.
As a result of the wide service coverage capabilities and reduced vulnerability of space/airborne vehicles to physical attacks and natural disasters, Non-Terrestrial Networks are expected to:
The benefits relate to either Non-Terrestrial Networks operating alone or to integrated terrestrial and Non-Terrestrial networks. They will impact at least coverage, user bandwidth, system capacity, service reliability or service availability, energy consumption and connection density. A role for Non-Terrestrial Network components in the 5G system is expected for at least the following verticals: transport, Public Safety, Media and Entertainment, eHealth, Energy, Agriculture, Finance and Automotive. It should also be noted that the same NTN benefits apply to 4G and/or LTE technologies and that while NR is sometimes referred to in the present disclosure, the teachings and techniques presented herein are equally applicable to 4G and/or LTE.
Many aspects of the operation of the wireless communications system/network 300 are known and understood and are not described here in detail in the interest of brevity. Operational aspects of the wireless communications system 300 which are not specifically described herein may be implemented in accordance with any known techniques, for example according to the current LTE-standards or the proposed NR standards.
The wireless communications system 300 comprises a core network part 302 (which may be a 4G core network or a 5G core network) in communicative connection with a radio network part. The radio network part 301 comprises a base station 332 connected to a ground station (or NTN gateway) 330. The radio network part 301 may perform the functions of a base station 101 of
An aerial vehicle 310 includes communications circuitry 334. In some embodiments, the communications circuitry 334 may be non-terrestrial infrastructure equipment which is mounted on, and/or within the aerial vehicle 310 as explained below. The communications circuitry 334 communicates via the ground station 330 with the base station 332 via a wireless communications link 312.
The communications circuitry 334 may communicate with a communications device 306, located within a cell 308, by means of a wireless access interface provided by a wireless communications link 314. For example, the cell 308 may correspond to the coverage area of a spot beam generated by the communications circuitry 334. The boundary of the cell 308 may depend on an altitude of the aerial vehicle 310 and a configuration of one or more antennas of the communications circuitry 334 by which the aerial vehicle transmits and receives signals on the wireless access interface. The spot beam may be an “earth fixed beam” which illuminates a geographic area on a surface of the earth for a pre-defined period of time. After the pre-defined period of time, the earth fixed beam may switch to serving a different geographic area on the surface of the earth. In such cases, the communications device 306 may be made aware of when the pre-defined period of time ends. In this way, the communications device 306 may determine to switch from being served by the aerial vehicle 310 to being served by another, different aerial vehicle (not shown) at the end of the pre-determined time period. Alternatively, the spot beam may be an “earth moving beam” which illuminates a constantly changing geographic area on the surface of the earth. In this case, the communications device 306 may determine to switch from being served by the aerial vehicle 310 to being served by the other aerial vehicle based on decision criteria. For example, the communications device 306 may determine to switch from being served by the aerial vehicle 310 to being served by the other aerial vehicle by determining that a distance between the communications device 306 and the aerial vehicle 310 is greater than a pre-defined distance. Alternatively, the communications device 306 may determine to switch from being served by the aerial vehicle 310 to being served by the other aerial vehicle by determining that the distance between the communications device 306 and the aerial vehicle 310 is greater than a distance between the communications device 306 and the other aerial vehicle.
The aerial vehicle 310 may be a satellite in an orbit with respect to the Earth. According to example embodiments, the satellite may be in a non-geostationary orbit (NGSO), so that the aerial vehicle 310 moves with respect to a fixed point on the Earth's surface. An example of an NGSO is an LEO, in which the satellite may complete an orbit of the Earth relatively quickly, thus providing moving cell coverage.
In
The extent to which the communications circuitry 334 processes the received signals may depend upon a processing capability of the communications circuitry 334. For example, the communications circuitry 334 may receive signals representing the downlink data on the wireless communication link 312, amplify them and (if needed) re-modulate onto an appropriate carrier frequency for onwards transmission on the wireless access interface provided by the wireless communications link 314.
Alternatively, the communications circuitry 334 of the aerial vehicle 310 may be configured to decode the signals representing the downlink data received on the wireless communication link 312 into un-encoded downlink data, re-encode the downlink data and modulate the encoded downlink data onto the appropriate carrier frequency for onwards transmission on the wireless access interface provided by the wireless communications link 314.
The communications circuitry 334 may be configured to perform some of the functionality conventionally carried out by a base station (e.g. a gNodeB or an eNode B), such as base station 101 of
In such arrangements, there may be a physical (e.g. wired, or fibre optic) connection on board the aerial vehicle 310 which provides the coupling between the circuitry of the communications circuitry 334 which implements base station functionality and a transceiver of the communications circuitry 334 which is configured communicate with the communications device 306 and the ground station 330. In such arrangements, a wireless communications feeder link between the communications circuitry 334 and the ground station 330 may provide connectivity between the communications circuitry 334 and the core network part 302. In such arrangements, the base station 332 may not be present.
In some cases, the communications device 306 shown in
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many scenarios can be envisaged in which the combination of the communications device 306 and the aerial vehicle 310 can provide enhanced service to end users.
For example, the communications device 306 may be mounted on a passenger vehicle such as a bus or train, which travels through rural areas where coverage by terrestrial base stations may be limited. Terminal devices on the vehicle may obtain service via the communications device 306 acting as a relay, which communicates with the communications circuitry 334.
In some cases, as shown in
In some cases, as shown in
It will be appreciated that references to the term “beam” may be taken to mean “cell”.
In such configurations, the communications device 306 may be handed over because the communications device 306 leaves the coverage area 308 of the first beam and enters the coverage area 348 of the second beam as a result of motion of the aerial vehicle (as shown in
In the present disclosure, the reference numeral “348” is to be taken to mean either coverage area 348a or coverage area 348b and the phrase “second beam” is to be taken as referring to either the second beam as explained with respect to
In such configurations, each of the plurality of cells has a different Physical Cell Identity (PCI). Accordingly, reference signals and scrambling codes used may be different for each of the plurality of cells, and each of the plurality of cells may be scheduled independently of each other. A handover of the communications device 306 from the coverage area 308 of the first beam to the coverage area 348 of the second beam may consist of a connected mode handover, a cell selection procedure or a cell reselection procedure. The handover procedure may be controlled by measurements made by the communications device and communicated to the base station, controlled by measurements made by the base station, controlled by declaration of radio link failure by the communications device or by other means.
There is a need to ensure that connectivity for the communications device 306 with the ground station 301 can be maintained, in light of the movement of the communications device 306, the movement of the aerial vehicle 310 (relative to the Earth's surface), or both. According to conventional cellular communications techniques, a decision to change a serving cell of the communications device 306 may be based on measurements of one or more characteristics of a radio frequency communications channel, such as signal strength measurements or signal quality measurements. In a terrestrial communications network, such measurements may effectively provide an indication that the communications device 306 is at, or approaching, an edge of a coverage region of a cell, since, for example, path loss may broadly correlate to a distance from a base station. However, such conventional measurement-based algorithms may be unsuitable for cells generated by means of the transmission of beams from communications circuitry 334 of an aerial vehicle, such as the cell 308 generated by the aerial vehicle 310.
A further challenge of conventional techniques may be the relatively high rate at which cell changes occur for the communications device 306 obtaining service from one or more aerial vehicles. For example, where the aerial vehicle 310 is an LEO satellite, the aerial vehicle 310 may complete an orbit of the Earth in around 90 minutes; the coverage of a cell generated by the aerial vehicle 310 will move very rapidly, with respect to a fixed observation point on the surface of the Earth (in one example, an LEO may move at 7.56 km/s as explained above). Similarly, it may be expected that the communications device 306 may be mounted on an airborne vehicle itself, typically having a ground speed of several hundreds of kilometres per hour. However, it will be appreciated that a speed of the aerial vehicle 310 relative to a fixed point on the Earth is generally much larger than typical speeds of airborne vehicles configured to mount the communications device 306.
Satellite Positional Information
One particular difficulty associated with NTNs is the large distances and relative speeds between a UE (such as communications device 306) and an eNB (such as base station 332 or a base station implemented in the communications circuitry 334) compared to terrestrial networks. For example, for an LEO, the distance between the satellite and the UE may be between 600 km to 1200 km. Hence, the propagation delay between the UE (hereinafter the term UE is used to refer to any communications device configured to communicate with a non-terrestrial infrastructure equipment of an NTN) and the eNB is significantly larger than for terrestrial networks, particularly in a ‘transparent’ arrangement such as that shown in
In order to take into account this large propagation delay, uplink transmissions would need to apply a large Timing Advance (TA) and the eNB would need to take this into account for scheduling of uplink data. The timing advance that needs to be applied depends on the location of the UE within the cell footprint of the satellite. Since the cell footprint can be large, there can be a large variation of the timing advance that needs to be applied, depending on the UE location within the cell footprint.
In addition to the increased RTT between the UE and the eNB, the NTN system also needs to take into account the movement of the satellite. For example, a LEO satellite can be travelling at 7.56 km/second (27,216 km/h) relative to the UE, which would cause significant Doppler shift that the UE needs to compensate for. In order to factor in the Doppler shift, i.e. in order to apply a pre-compensation for the frequency of the uplink transmissions, the UE needs to know its own geo-location and the motion (e.g. position and velocity) of the satellite. The geo-location of the UE can, for example, be obtained from a Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) or from any other suitable means.
The position and velocity of the satellite can be derived from the satellite ephemeris information, that is the satellite orbital trajectory, which can be periodically broadcast to the UE, e.g. via System Information Blocks (SIBs). However, broadcasting ephemeris information, e.g. every 100 ms, can lead to high signaling overhead.
Furthermore, signaling ephemeris information does not take into account perturbations in the satellite orbit and hence may not provide sufficient accuracy to determine the required timing advance and frequency compensation. In particular, satellites in LEO do not exist in a perfect vacuum and thus experience a number of factors such as varying drag coefficients or gravitational forces which perturb the orbit of the satellite.
As such, as the time since a UE last received a periodic broadcast of the satellite ephemeris information increases, the accuracy with which the UE can accurately determine the position and velocity of the satellite decreases.
One possibility is that instead of sending ephemeris information, the eNB or an NTN Gateway can derive the satellite position and velocity and broadcast it via the SIBs. The satellite position and velocity may be determined by the eNB or NTN Gateway, for example, via GNSS or other suitable means. The eNB or NTN Gateway may determine the satellite position and velocity via communications on the network itself, or the eNB or NTN Gateway may determine the satellite position and velocity by other means, separate from the network. For example, the eNB or NTN Gateway may derive the satellite position and velocity, e.g. via a telemetry link to the satellite, and the eNB may transmit that information in the SIBs. The eNB/NTN Gateway may estimate satellite position and velocity at the System Frame Number (SFN) in which the SIB is broadcasted, thereby providing real time position and velocity information. Hereinafter, the term ‘eNB’ is used to refer to any of a base station, a gNB, an eNB or an NTN gateway, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
Time Spent in Beam Footprint
As explained above, the large distances and relative speeds between the UE and the eNB for NTNs compared to terrestrial networks lead to technical challenges. Another associated difficulty for NTNs compared to terrestrial networks is that the UE spends a relatively short time in a coverage area of the cell compared to terrestrial networks. The time which a UE spends in the coverage area of a cell for NTNs depends on a distance between the UE and a satellite (which may or may not be co-located with the eNB as explained above), a speed of the UE relative to the satellite and a width of a spot beam generated by the satellite which provides the coverage area.
In one example, an LEO orbiting the Earth at an altitude of 600 km and generating a spot beam operating at a carrier frequency of 2 GHz may have an 3 dB angular beamwidth of 4.4127 degrees (corresponding to a 46 km beamwidth when the LEO is at its zenith) [3]. For a LEO moving at 7.56 km/sec, the UE will be in the coverage area of the spot beam for only 6.1 seconds.
An example of difficulties which may arise from the relatively short time period which a communications device spends in a coverage area of a satellite is explained with reference to
Accordingly, for the example provided in
As indicated above,
Communications resources in the entering period 716 may be reserved for various communications processes as the communications device 306 enters the coverage area 308 of the first beam. For example, during the entering period 716, the communications device 306 may:
Similarly, communications resources in the leaving period 818 may be reserved for various communications processes as the communications device 306 moves out of the coverage area of the first beam. For example, during the leaving period 818, the communications device 306 may:
Since communications resources are reserved during the entering period 716 and the leaving period 818, it may not be possible to schedule signals representing uplink or downlink data to be transmitted to or from the communications device 306 respectively in the entering period 716 or the leaving period 818. For example,
It will be appreciated that, in the example provided in
Accordingly, for the example provided in
An NB-IoT transmission spanning 4.096 seconds is referred to in the present disclosure as consisting of 4096 repetitions. It will be appreciated that references to “repetitions” may consist of a mixture of resource units and actual repetitions. Although the present disclosure refers to eMTC transmissions of 4.096 seconds duration or of 4096 repetitions, it will be appreciated by one skilled in the art that this is merely an example and other durations/number of repetitions may be used. While the maximum number of eMTC transmissions in a current standard is 2048 repetitions, it will be appreciated that the following description refers to eMTC transmissions of 4.096 second duration as this acts to highlight the nature of the problem to be solved. It will further be appreciated that embodiments discussed below with respect to eMTC may be applied to NB-IoT. In NB-IoT, transmissions of duration 4.096 seconds are possible according to the current standards.
In view of the above-mentioned technical challenges, there is provided a method of operating a communications device to transmit or to receive via a wireless communications network including non-terrestrial, NTN, infrastructure equipment. The communications device identifies a first in-coverage period during which the communications device can transmit signals to or receive signals from a first NTN infrastructure equipment, the first NTN infrastructure equipment being either carried by a first aerial vehicle or relayed via the first aerial vehicle to or from the first NTN infrastructure equipment as the aerial vehicle passes over the communications device. The communications device identifies a second in-coverage period during which the communications device can transmit signals to or receive signals from either the first NTN infrastructure equipment or a second NTN infrastructure equipment, the second NTN infrastructure equipment being either carried by a second aerial vehicle or the transmitted or the received signal are relayed via the second aerial vehicle to or from the second NTN infrastructure equipment as the second aerial vehicle passes over the communications device. The communications device transmits uplink data to the wireless communications network by adapting a transmission of the uplink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period, based on a length of time required to transmit the uplink data and a start time at which the uplink data can be transmitted in the first in-coverage period with respect to an end of the first in-coverage period, or alternatively, the communications device receives downlink data from the wireless communications network by adapting a reception of the downlink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period, having been transmitted at least partly in the second in-coverage period, based on a length of time required to receive the downlink data and a start time at which the downlink data can be received in the first in-coverage period with respect to an end of the first in-coverage period.
Communications Device Deferring Transmission
The communications device 306 may determine that the scheduled PUSCH 904 cannot be completely transmitted in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. In response, the communications device 306 may determine to defer transmission of the scheduled PUSCH 904 until the communications device 306 is in the coverage area 348 of the second beam. In example embodiments, the communications device 306 may defer the transmission of the scheduled PUSCH 904 to begin at an end point 928 of an entering period 916 for the second beam, as shown by the deferred PUSCH 906 in
In such embodiments, a length of the entering period 916 for the second beam may be known by both the communications device 306 and the base station which schedules the communications device 306. For example, the length of the entering period 916 may be represented as a number of subframes (Ntrans) after a start point of the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam (which coincides with the end point of the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam in
Such embodiments allow the communications device 306 to prepare for transmissions when it is in the coverage area 348 of the second beam and can arrange for the deferred PUSCH 906 to be transmitted as early as possible after the communications device 306 has entered the coverage area 348 of the second beam. In some embodiments, as shown in
In some embodiments, a Physical Uplink Control Channel (PUCCH) transmission may be providing HARQ-ACK feedback for a Physical Downlink Shared Channel (PDSCH) transmission when the communications device 306 is in the coverage area 308 of the first beam. In such embodiments, the communications device 306 may determine that it cannot completely transmit the scheduled PUCCH in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and defers transmission of the PUCCH until the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
In some embodiments, communications device 306 may be configured to operate with pre-configured uplink resources (PUR). In such embodiments, the communications device 306 may determine that it cannot completely transmit a PUR transmission when the communications device 306 is in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and defers transmission of the PUR until the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
It will be appreciated that embodiments discussed with reference to
In example embodiments, as illustrated in
In some embodiments, the bit 1030 in the DCI signals a time delay after the MPDCCH transmission 1002 at which the PUSCH 1006 should begin to be transmitted. If the time delay is greater than a remaining time during which the communications device 306 is located in the coverage area of the first beam, then the communications device 306 transmits the PUSCH 1006 during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
Base Station Defers Transmission
In some embodiments, the base station may determine that there is insufficient time remaining in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam for the communications device 306 to completely transmit signals representing data scheduled by the base station to the base station. In such embodiments, the base station may determine not to schedule the communications device 306 to transmit the signals representing the data in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. In such embodiments, if the same base station is configured to schedule transmissions for the communications device 306 in both the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam, then the base station may prepare for the signals representing the data to be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. In other words, the base station defers the scheduling of the signals representing the data to be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
Retransmitting Missed Repetitions
The communications device 306 may receive a downlink transmission containing signals representing downlink data from the base station. In some embodiments, the communications device 306 may determine that there is insufficient time remaining in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam for the communications device 306 to completely receive the downlink transmission. In such embodiments, the communications device 306 may store Log-Likelihood Ratios (LLRs) related to the part of the downlink transmission which was not received. For example, the communications device 306 may determine that a downlink transmission (such as a PDSCH or MPDCCH) is not received correctly if a full set of scheduled repetitions is not received at the communications device 306 when the communications device 306 moves from the coverage area 308 of the first beam to the coverage area 348 of the second beam. In response, the communications device 306 stores LLRs related to the parts of the downlink transmission which were not received correctly. By storing the LLRs related to the parts of the downlink transmission which were not received correctly, the communications device 306 is configured to receive a retransmission of the parts of the downlink transmission which were not received correctly during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. In a particular example, the communications device 306 may be scheduled with 512 repetitions of PDSCH when it is in the coverage area 308 of the first beam. However, only 256 repetitions of the PDSCH may have been received by the communications device 306 before the end point 712 of the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. The communications device 306 may then store the LLRs relating to the remaining 256 repetitions of the PDSCH to be retransmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
In some embodiments, the communications device 306 may determine parameters (such as a number of repetitions) for transmitting the remaining parts of the downlink transmission based on parameters of the part of the downlink transmission which was received by the communications device 306. Such embodiments do not require an MPDCCH to be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. For example, if a PDSCH transmission with 4096 repetitions was scheduled during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and only 1536 repetitions were received by the communications device 306, the communications device 306 determines that the part of the downlink transmission to be retransmitted consists of 2560 repetitions. In example embodiments, the number of repetitions for the re-transmission may take into account changes in a quality of a radio link connecting the communications device 306 and the aerial vehicle 310 between the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. For example, if the pathloss during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam is different to the pathloss during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam (for example, where the first and second beams are generated by different satellites on different orbital trajectories), the number of repetitions may be scaled by the pathloss difference.
Although the above embodiments have been described with respect to the downlink transmission, it will be appreciated that such embodiments are equally applicable to uplink transmission. For example, the base station may store LLRs related to parts of an uplink transmission which was not correctly received at the base station during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam, and use the stored LLRs in combination with the LLRs received from the retransmitted parts of the uplink transmission that are received during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam in order to fully decode the uplink transmission.
In some embodiments, the parts 1208 of the scheduled PDSCH which were not correctly received by the communications device 306 may be re-scheduled by another MPDCCH to be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. Specifically, the base station may transmit another MDPCCH during the coverage period 802 of the second beam to inform the communications device 306 to receive the parts 1208 of the scheduled PDSCH which were not correctly received during the coverage period 802 of the second beam. Such embodiments are particularly advantageous when the interrupted transmission (which is described as PDSCH in this example) is an uplink transmission (for example, PUSCH). This is because the base station may terminate the PUSCH early, as it may able to decode the PUSCH without the re-scheduled parts.
In some embodiments, the parts 1208 of the scheduled PDSCH which were not correctly received by the communications device 306 may be re-scheduled by another MPDCCH containing DCI to be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. Specifically, the base station may transmit another MDPCCH during the coverage period 802 of the second beam to inform the communications device 306 to receive a transmission of the parts 1208 of the scheduled PDSCH which were not correctly received during the coverage period 802 of the second beam. The DCI may inform the communications device 306 to continue reception during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam which was started during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. In some embodiments, the DCI may indicate that the reception during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam should continue with different parameters than were used for the reception during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. For example, the DCI may indicate that a redundancy version (RV) and/or frequency resources for the reception in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam have changed relative to an RV and/or frequency resources for the reception in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. Such embodiments can improve scheduling flexibility during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
In some embodiments, the communications device 306 ensures that its HARQ buffers are not flushed when the communications device 306 is handed over from the first beam to the second beam. If the HARQ buffers are not flushed, then the communication device is able to combine transmissions which occur during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and transmissions which occur during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. In some embodiments, identical transport blocks are used for the transmission in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and for the re-transmission in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. In such embodiments, the same Medium Access Control (MAC) control elements are transmitted in both the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. It will be appreciated that MAC control elements contribute to bits that are transmitted in the transport block. Since the MAC control elements control some cell functionality (for example timing advance and power headroom reporting), the MAC control elements that were transmitted during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam may not be applicable for the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam.
In some embodiments, the communications device 306 or base station receives the MAC control elements during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam and determines that the received MAC control elements apply for the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam.
In some embodiments, the communications device 306 or base station may determine that some of the contents of the received MAC control elements apply for the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. For example, MAC control elements such as timing advance (TA) may be applicable for both the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and the in-coverage period of the second beam if the first and second beams are generated by the same satellite. As will be appreciated, the TA depends on a distance between the communication device 704 and the serving satellite, and the distance from the base station to the satellite which does not change if the communications device 306 switches from being served by the first and second beams if they are generated by the same satellite.
In some embodiments, a transport block encoded by the communications device 306 for uplink transmission is not flushed when the communication device 704 is handed over from the first beam to the second beam if the uplink transmission is not completely transmitted during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. Such embodiments allow the communications device 306 to use the encoded transport block to continue with the remaining part of the uplink transmission during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam
In some embodiments, the base station may transmit DCI signals to the communication device 704 to instruct the communications to perform one of the following procedures:
As explained above, in some embodiments, there may be insufficient time for all of the repetitions of an uplink/downlink transmission to be completely transmitted in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. The repetitions which were not transmitted in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam may be re-transmitted in the in-coverage period of the second beam. In some embodiments, the re-transmitted repetitions may be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam with the same characteristics which were used for the transmission in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. Such “characteristics” may include one or more of a scrambling code, a Demodulation Reference Signal (DMRS) sequence and Koffset. In conventional systems, the scrambling code and DMRS sequence generator are functions of cell ID and Koffset is a timing offset that is applied in NTN systems to extend a timeline in LTE/NR timing relationships (for example, to extend the time between MPDCCH transmission and PDSCH reception).
According to example embodiments, if the number of repetitions of a downlink transmission (for example, PDSCH) is too large for the downlink transmission to be completely transmitted during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam then the communications device 306 may receive the repetitions, which were not successfully received at the communications device 306, during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam with the same characteristics that were used to receive the downlink transmission during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. In such embodiments, the base station transmits the re-transmitted repetitions during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam with the same characteristics that were used to transmit the downlink transmission during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam.
According to example embodiments, if the number of repetitions of an uplink transmission (for example, PUSCH) is too large for the uplink transmission to be completely transmitted during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam then the communications device 306 may transmit the repetitions which were not successfully transmitted at the communications device 306 during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam with the same characteristics that were used to transmit the uplink transmission during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam. In such embodiments, the base station receives the re-transmitted repetitions during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam with the same characteristics that were used to receive the uplink transmission during the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam.
In such embodiments, after the re-transmitted repetitions have been successfully transmitted, the base station may convert a new cell corresponding to the coverage area 348 of the second beam to operate in accordance with transmissions for the new cell. For example, the base station may reconfigure the satellite to operate in accordance with a new TA (timing advance) and/or Koffset.
In some embodiments, the re-transmitted repetitions may be transmitted in the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam with different characteristics which were used for the transmission in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam.
In some embodiments, repetitions which span the leaving period 818 for the first beam and the entering period 916 for the second beam may be dropped.
In some embodiments, the re-transmitted repetitions are delayed during the leaving period 818 for the first beam and the entering period 916 for the second beam.
In the conventional systems, an RV and scrambling code are maintained for every 4 repetitions. For example if there are 16 repetitions, the 1st to 4th repetition may use one RV and scrambling code, the 5th to 8th repetitions may use another RV and another scrambling code. Such arrangements facilitate symbol combining at a receiver and cross subframe channel estimation for every batch of 4 repetitions. If the repetition is cut off during a batch (rather than at a batch boundary), a benefit of symbol combining and cross subframe channel estimation is reduced. Benefits of symbol combining can include improving a signal to noise (SNR) ratio and simplifying receiver design. Benefits of cross channel estimation can include improved robustness and/or channel estimation accuracy.
An example of a repetition being cut off during a batch is shown in
In example embodiments, the “cut off” batch may be postponed. In other words, the repetition may be cut-off at a batch boundary rather than during a batch. For example, if the communications device 306 determines that a repetition is going to be cut off during a batch, the communications device 306 may delay transmission so that a new batch may be started in a new cell. For example,
In example embodiments, the “cut off” batch may be restarted in a new cell. In other words, the communications device 306 may continue to transmit (or receive) a batch that is cut off but restarts the transmission (or reception) of the cut off batch in the new cell.
In example embodiments, the cut off batch is dropped. An example of a cut off batch being dropped is shown in
The functionality of cutting off a batch may be implemented at either the communications device or the base station. For example, considering downlink transmissions, if a batch is cut-off by the base station, the base station refrains from transmitting repetitions from that batch. In this case, the communications device would not store LLRs in its buffers relating to repetitions falling within the cut-off batch. In contrast, if the batch is cut-off at the communications device, the communications device refrains from receiving repetitions from the cut-off batch. In this case, the base station scheduler may choose a number of repetitions accounting for the fact that the communications device would not receive some of the repetitions.
Signalling to Control Communications Device During Cell Changes
In accordance with example embodiments, when a scheduled PUSCH transmission spans the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam and the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam, then System Information Block (SIB)/Master Information Block (MIB) signalling may be used during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam to indicate whether PUSCH transmissions in the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam are to be continued during the in-coverage period of the second beam. In some embodiments, DCI or RRC signalling may indicate that communications device 306 stops PUSCH transmission and continues the PUSCH transmission during the in-coverage period 802 of the second beam. In some embodiments, DCI or RRC signalling may indicate that communications device 306 stops PUSCH transmission when it changes cell (for example, at the end point 928 of the in-coverage period 702 of the first beam)
Those skilled in the art would further appreciate that such infrastructure equipment and/or communications devices as herein defined may be further defined in accordance with the various arrangements and embodiments discussed in the preceding paragraphs. It would be further appreciated by those skilled in the art that such infrastructure equipment and communications devices as herein defined and described may form part of communications systems other than those defined by the present disclosure.
The following numbered paragraphs provide further example aspects and features of the present technique:
Paragraph 1. A method of operating a communications device to transmit or to receive via a wireless communications network, which includes non-terrestrial, NTN, infrastructure equipment, the method comprising:
Paragraph 2. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the adapting the transmission of the uplink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period comprises
Paragraph 3. A method according to paragraph 2, wherein the identifying that the start time at which the uplink data can be transmitted during the first in-coverage period comprises
Paragraph 4. A method according to paragraph 2, wherein the scheduling the transmission of the uplink
Paragraph 5. A method according to paragraph 4, wherein the downlink control information received in the first in-coverage period identifies time and frequency resources of the at least part of the second in-coverage period.
Paragraph 6. A method according to paragraphs 4 or 5, wherein the scheduling the transmission of the uplink data during the first in-coverage period comprises
Paragraph 7. A method according to paragraph 3, wherein the transmitting the uplink data comprises
Paragraph 8. A method according to any of paragraphs 1 to 7, wherein the transmitting the uplink data comprises
Paragraph 9. A method according to paragraph 8, wherein the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, comprises determining a remaining number of redundant versions after the first number of redundant versions have been transmitted from the start time at which the uplink data can be transmitted in the first in-coverage period.
Paragraph 10. A method according to paragraph 8, wherein the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, comprises receiving second downlink control information indicating the second number of redundant versions.
Paragraph 11. A method according to paragraph 8, wherein the transmitting the uplink data comprises
Paragraph 12. A method according to any of paragraphs 1 to 10, wherein the transmitting the uplink data comprises
Paragraph 13. A method according to any of paragraphs 1 to 10, wherein the transmitting the uplink data comprises
Paragraph 14. A method according to paragraph 8, wherein the transmitting the uplink data as a plurality of repetitions of a redundant version of a transport block comprises
Paragraph 15. A method according to paragraph 1, wherein the adapting the reception of the downlink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period comprises
Paragraph 16. A method according to paragraph 15, wherein the identifying that the start time at which the downlink data can be received during the first in-coverage period comprises
Paragraph 17. A method according to paragraphs 15 or 16, wherein the determining the reception of the downlink data during the first in-coverage period comprises
Paragraph 18. A method according to paragraph 17, wherein the downlink control information received in the first in-coverage period identifies time and frequency resources of the at least part of the second in-coverage period from which the downlink data can be received.
Paragraph 19. A method according to paragraph 15, 16 or 17, wherein the receiving the downlink data comprises
Paragraph 20. A method according to paragraph 15, 16 or 17, wherein the receiving the downlink data comprises
Paragraph 21. A method according to paragraph 20, wherein the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, comprises determining a remaining number of redundancy versions after the first number of redundancy versions have been transmitted from the start time at which the downlink data can be transmitted in the first in-coverage period.
Paragraph 22. A method according to paragraph 20, wherein the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, comprises receiving second downlink control information indicating the second number of redundant versions.
Paragraph 23. A method according to paragraph 20, wherein the receiving the downlink data comprises
Paragraph 24. A method according to paragraph 20, wherein the receiving the downlink data includes
Paragraph 25. A method according to any of paragraphs 15 to 24, wherein the receiving the downlink data comprises
Paragraph 26. A method according to any of paragraphs 15 to 25, wherein the receiving the downlink data comprises
Paragraph 27. A method according to paragraph 19 or 20, wherein the receiving the downlink data as a plurality of repetitions of a redundant version of a transport block comprises
Paragraph 28. A method of operating a non-terrestrial network, NTN, infrastructure equipment of a wireless communications network for transmitting data to or receiving data from one or more communications devices, the method comprising:
Paragraph 29. A communications device for transmitting or receiving via a wireless communications network, the wireless communications network including non-terrestrial, NTN, infrastructure equipment, the communications device comprising
Paragraph 30. A communications device according to paragraph 29, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the adapting the transmission of the uplink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period by
Paragraph 31. A communications device according to paragraph 29 or 30, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the identifying that the start time at which the uplink data can be transmitted during the first in-coverage period by
Paragraph 32. A communications device according to paragraph 29 or 30, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the scheduling the transmission of the uplink data during the first in-coverage period by
Paragraph 33. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 32, wherein the downlink control information received in the first in-coverage period identifies time and frequency resources of the at least part of the second in-coverage period.
Paragraph 34. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 32, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the scheduling the transmission of the uplink data during the first in-coverage period by
Paragraph 35. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 32, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the transmitting the uplink data by
Paragraph 36. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 35, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the transmitting the uplink data by
Paragraph 37. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 36, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, by determining a remaining number of redundant versions after the first number of redundant versions have been transmitted from the start time at which the uplink data can be transmitted in the first in-coverage period.
Paragraph 38. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 36, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, by receiving second downlink control information indicating the second number of redundant versions.
Paragraph 39. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 36, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the transmitting the uplink data by
Paragraph 40. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 39, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the transmitting the uplink data by
Paragraph 41. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 40, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the transmitting the uplink data by
Paragraph 42. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 36, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the transmitting the uplink data as a plurality of repetitions of a redundant version of a transport block by
Paragraph 43. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 42, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the adapting the reception of the downlink data to include at least part of the second in-coverage period by
Paragraph 44. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 43, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the identifying that the start time at which the downlink data can be received during the first in-coverage period by
Paragraph 45. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 43, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the determining the reception of the downlink data during the first in-coverage period by
Paragraph 46. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 45, wherein the downlink control information received in the first in-coverage period identifies time and frequency resources of the at least part of the second in-coverage period from which the downlink data can be received.
Paragraph 47. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 43, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data by
Paragraph 48. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 43, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data by
Paragraph 49. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 48, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, by determining a remaining number of redundancy versions after the first number of redundancy versions have been transmitted from the start time at which the downlink data can be transmitted in the first in-coverage period.
Paragraph 50. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 49, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the determining the second number of the redundant versions to be transmitted in the second in-coverage period, by
Paragraph 51. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 49, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data by
Paragraph 52. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 49, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data includes
Paragraph 53. A communications device according to any of paragraphs 29 to 44, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data by
Paragraph 54. A communications device according to any of paragraphs 29 to 44, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data by
Paragraph 55. A communications device according to paragraphs 29 to 48, wherein the control circuitry is configured to perform the receiving the downlink data as a plurality of repetitions of a redundant version of a transport block by
Paragraph 56. A method of operating a non-terrestrial network, NTN, infrastructure equipment of a wireless communications network for transmitting data to or receiving data from one or more communications devices, the method comprising:
Paragraph 57. A non-terrestrial network, NTN, infrastructure equipment for forming part of a wireless communications network for transmitting data to or receiving data from one or more communications devices, the NTN infrastructure equipment comprising:
In so far as embodiments of the disclosure have been described as being implemented, at least in part, by software-controlled data processing apparatus, it will be appreciated that a non-transitory machine-readable medium carrying such software, such as an optical disk, a magnetic disk, semiconductor memory or the like, is also considered to represent an embodiment of the present disclosure.
It will be appreciated that the above description for clarity has described embodiments with reference to different functional units, circuitry and/or processors. However, it will be apparent that any suitable distribution of functionality between different functional units, circuitry and/or processors may be used without detracting from the embodiments.
Described embodiments may be implemented in any suitable form including hardware, software, firmware or any combination of these. Described embodiments may optionally be implemented at least partly as computer software running on one or more data processors and/or digital signal processors. The elements and components of any embodiment may be physically, functionally and logically implemented in any suitable way. Indeed the functionality may be implemented in a single unit, in a plurality of units or as part of other functional units. As such, the disclosed embodiments may be implemented in a single unit or may be physically and functionally distributed between different units, circuitry and/or processors.
Although the present disclosure has been described in connection with some embodiments, it is not intended to be limited to the specific form set forth herein. Additionally, although a feature may appear to be described in connection with particular embodiments, one skilled in the art would recognise that various features of the described embodiments may be combined in any manner suitable to implement the technique.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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21166488.3 | Mar 2021 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2022/058498 | 3/30/2022 | WO |