The exemplary and non-limiting embodiments of this invention relate generally to wireless communications and more specifically to precoding for a coordinated multi-point joint transmission in wireless systems (e.g., LTE systems).
The following abbreviations that may be found in the specification and/or the drawing figures are defined as follows:
Coordinated Multi-Point (CoMP) transmission is currently being investigated in 3GPP RAN documents, e.g., see R1-111637 (“System Performance of JP-CoMP in Homogeneous Networks with RRHs”, 3GPP TSG RAN WG1 Meeting #65, Barcelona, Spain, May 9-13, 2011), and R1-111600 (“Further Phase-1 Evaluation of Joint Transmission and DCS Schemes”, 3GPP TSG RAN WG1 Meeting #65, Barcelona, Spain, May 9-13, 2011).
The motivation for downlink (DL) CoMP is to allow fast coordination among different transmission points to improve a throughput performance. To enable closed-loop transmission from multiple transmission points to a given UE, channel state information for multiple radio links needs to be measured by the UE and sent to the network using the uplink control channel (PUCCH) or the uplink data channel (PUSCH). To simplify presentation a UE and two eNBs are considered, as shown in
The UE communicates with eNB1 through a radio link A using uplink channels PUCCH and PUSCH and downlink channel PDCCH. In the case of the CoMP transmission the UE can receive a joint transmission using PDSCH from eNB1 through the link A and from eNB2 through a link B.
Each of these links may contain multiple transmit/multiple receive antennas and for simplicity it is assumed the UE has 2 receive antennas, and eNB1 and eNB2 having NTA, NTB transmit antennas. Then the radio links A and B define NTA×2 and NTB×2 channels, respectively. In addition to these links we can also consider a multi-point link from the eNB1 and eNB2 to UE as shown in
In a CoMP scenario the UE can perform channel state information (CSI) measurements for the links A, B, AB and send the measurements to the eNB1 via the PUCCH or PUSCH. The measurement and signaling needed for serving cell CSI feedback (e.g., link A in
Coordinated scheduling and beamforming (CS/CB) and dynamic point selection (DPS) are CoMP techniques where the PDSCH transmission for a UE specific resource block (RB) is from one transmission point. Therefore CS/CB and DPS techniques are agnostic to spatial channel information between two or more transmission points. In such cases a natural extension of the serving cell CSI feedback mechanism is possible where a single cell CSI feedback can be supported for non-serving cells (e.g. the link B in this example).
Two approaches have been recently proposed for implementing the CoMP transmission.
The first approach involves Hierarchical PMI feedback (R1-111637, “System Performance of JP-CoMP in Homogeneous Networks with RRHs”, 3GPP TSG RAN WG1 Meeting #65, Barcelona, Spain, May 9-13, 2011). This technique has been proposed by multiple companies where an inter-point codebook (essentially a quantized phase difference between the eNB1 and eNB2) has been used. This implies that a PMI for the radio link A can be combined with a PMI for the radio link B by an inter-point codebook to generate a PMI for the multi-point radio link AB. It is however not clear whether and how the design handles ranks greater than one and whether orthonormality is guaranteed for rank-2 and higher disparate precoders for the link AB.
The second approach involves Non-Hierarchical PMI feedback (R1-111600, “Further Phase-1 Evaluation of Joint Transmission and DCS Schemes”, 3GPP TSG RAN WG1 Meeting #65, Barcelona, Spain, May 9-13, 2011). In this approach a single joint PMI is used for multi-point radio link AB in addition to a single cell PMI for radio link A. The advantage here is that the ranks can be different for the radio links A and AB and there is compression of PMI information by using a joint PMI. This approach, however, is not easily scalable to an increase in the number of transmission points and is not flexible in handling different numbers of transmit antennas for different transmission points.
Joint transmission (JT) is a CoMP technique where multiple transmission points transmit a UE specific RB on the PDSCH. Therefore JT requires knowledge of spatial information between transmission points. This means that cell CSI feedback methods do not naturally extend to the case of JT where spatial information is needed for the link AB shown in
According to a first aspect of the invention, a method comprises: receiving a data stream by a precoder of a device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points; and precoding the data stream to form a spatial data stream signal using a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points where the multi-point precoding matrix is given by a multiplication of at least two matrices: a first matrix constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, wherein a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one.
According to a second aspect of the invention, an apparatus comprises: a processing system comprising at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions, in which the processing system is arranged to cause the apparatus to: receive a data stream by a precoder of a device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points; and precode the data stream to form a spatial data stream signal using a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points where the multi-point precoding matrix is given by a multiplication of at least two matrices: a first matrix constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, wherein a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one.
According to a third aspect of the invention, a non-transitory computer readable memory encoded with a computer program comprising computer readable instructions recorded thereon for execution a method which comprises: receiving a data stream by a precoder of a device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points; and precoding the data stream to form a spatial data stream signal using a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points where the multi-point precoding matrix is given by a multiplication of at least two matrices: a first matrix constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, wherein a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one.
According to a fourth aspect of the invention, a method comprises: providing at least one feedback tracking signal by a receiving device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points, wherein the at least one feedback tracking signal comprises information for defining a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points and given by multiplication of at least two matrices: a first matrix constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, wherein a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one.
According to a fifth aspect of the invention, an apparatus comprises: a processing system comprises at least one processor and a memory storing a set of computer instructions, in which the processing system is arranged to cause the apparatus to provide at least one feedback tracking signal by a receiving device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points, wherein the at least one feedback tracking signal comprises information for defining a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points and given by multiplication of at least two matrices: a first matrix constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, wherein a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one.
According to a sixth aspect of the invention, a non-transitory computer readable memory encoded with a computer program comprising computer readable instructions recorded thereon for execution a method comprises: providing at least one feedback tracking signal by a receiving device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points, wherein the at least one feedback tracking signal comprises information for defining a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points and given by multiplication of at least two matrices: a first matrix constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, wherein a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one.
According to a seventh aspect of the invention, a method comprises: receiving a data stream by a precoder of a device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points; and precoding the data stream to form a spatial data stream signal using a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points, wherein the multi-point precoding matrix is constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one and the multi-point precoding matrix is orthogonal.
According to eighth aspect of the invention, a method comprises: providing at least one feedback tracking signal by a receiving device engaged in a coordinated multi-point joint transmission involving links between a user equipment having multiple receive antennas and a plurality of transmission points, wherein the at least one feedback tracking signal comprises information for defining a multi-point precoding matrix for one multi-point link between the user equipment and the plurality of transmission points, and wherein the multi-point precoding matrix is constructed from single point precoding matrices for the plurality of transmission points determined using predefined rules, a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix is larger than one and the multi-point precoding matrix is orthogonal.
For a better understanding of the nature and objects of embodiments of the invention, reference is made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
a-3b are graphs showing dependence of a throughput on SNR for a 10 MHz LTE downlink simulated according to exemplary embodiments of the invention.
a-4b are flow chart demonstrating precoding in coordinated multi-point joint transmission, according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention; and
A new method, apparatus, and software related product (e.g., a computer readable memory) are presented for implementing precoding for a coordinated multi-point joint transmission in wireless systems such as LTE using a specific product structure for a multi-point precoding matrix with designed and/or specified usage of multi-point codebooks for generating spatial data streams between a UE having multiple antennas and a plurality of cells (or transmission points).
In the following the term “cell” may be used as equivalent to an eNB, so the terms “cell” and “cell eNB” are equivalent to “eNB”. Also if, for example, an eNB1 forms a link A with the UE, it is equivalent to the UE being in communication with a “cell A”. Similarly, if an eNB2 forms a link B with the UE, it is equivalent to the UE being in communication with a “cell B”. Also terms “multi-cell”, single cell”, “cell” and “inter-cell” may be more generally interpreted as “multi-point”, “single point” “point” and “inter-point”. The eNBs (i.e., eNB1 and eNB2) may be completely separate physical eNBs which may be geographically separated (this configuration is known as inter-site CoMP) or the eNBs may refer to two sectors (e.g., sectors 1 and 2) within a larger eNB unit (which is known as intra-site CoMP).
In order for the user equipment to receive a coherent transmission from the two eNBs over link AB, the user equipment can feed back to at least one eNB (e.g., eNB1) the joint multi-point precoding matrix WAB which the eNBs should use in transmitting to the user equipment. In other words, the eNBs will use WAB to apply antenna-specific weightings to the data stream or streams destined for the particular user equipment. Note that it is also possible for the user equipment to receive anon-coherent transmission from the two eNBs over link AB by feeding back to at least one eNB the joint multi-point precoding matrix WAB which does not contain inter-point phase information. The multi-point precoding matrix WAB for one multi-point link (e.g., link AB in
WAB=UABPABVAB (1),
where WAB is a multi-point precoding matrix for a plurality of cells, UAB is a first matrix constructed from multiple single cell precoding matrices (or a single point precoding matrices for a plurality of transmission points), PAB is a multi-link power allocation matrix (or a multi-point power allocation matrix for the plurality of transmission points) for the plurality of cells and VAB is an inter-cell precoding matrix (or an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of transmission points). UAB, PAB and VAB may be determined using predefined rules (criteria), as further described herein. In one embodiment, a rank of the multi-point precoding matrix may be larger than one and is equal or larger than a rank of any of the single cell precoding matrices. In another embodiment the rank of the multi-point precoding matrix WAB may be equal to one while at least one of the single point precoding matrices contained in UAB has a rank greater than one (e.g., the rank may be equal two). In a further embodiment the matrix WAB may be orthonormal. Designing and/or specifying the usage of multi-point codebooks for defining the product structure WAB is further described below. The embodiments of the invention specifically relates to the feedback of spatial channel information. According to another embodiment, a simplified version of Equation 1 may be as follows:
WAB=UABVAB.
An exemplary embodiment is considered for multi-point codebook design for two transmission points (e.g., as shown in
Case 1:
Let wA (size NTA×1) and wB (size NTB×1) be the rank-1 precoders selected for the links A and B respectively. Then the rank-1 precoder for the link AB may be given by wAB=UABPABvAB, where
wAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×1, UAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×2, PAB is of the size 2×2 and is of the size 2×1. The inter-point codebook is given by a codebook for vAB. For wA and wB with NTA=NTB=2 (two transmit antennas), the rank-1 codebook for LTE can be reused. Examples of rank-1 and rank-2 codebooks which may be used for w4 and wB with 2 transmit antennas (NTA=NTB=2) is shown in Table 2 below. Similarly the rank-1 codebook shown in Table 2 may be used for vAB. An example of how PAB can be fed back to an eNB is to quantize the values of pA to some range (e.g., between 0.3 and 1.4) by B bits and then determine pB=√{square root over (2−pA2)}.
Case 2:
Let wA (size NTA×1) and wB (size NTB×1) be the rank-1 precoders selected for the links A and B respectively. Then the rank-2 precoder for the link AB may be given by WAB=UABPABVAB, where
and VAB is a 2×2 unitary matrix. WAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×2, UAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×2, PAB is of size 2×2 and VAB is of size 2×2. The inter-point codebook in this case is given by a codebook for VAB, where the rank-2 codebook (e.g., for two transmit antennas) for LTE can be reused for this case, e.g., from Table 2. In an alternative embodiment the inter-point codebook VAB and/or PAB may be assumed to be an identity. If the inter-point matrix VAB is identity then the resulting transmission and reception scheme may also be termed as non-coherent. Also for wA and wB with 2 transmit antennas (NTA=NTB=2), the rank-1 codebook for LTE can be reused, e.g., rank-1 codebook with 2 transmit antennas (NTA=NTB=2) as shown in Table 2 above. An example of how PAB can be fed back to an eNB is to quantize the values of pA to some range (e.g., between 0.3 and 1.4) by B bits and then determine pB=√{square root over (2−pA2)}.
It is further noted that the rank-1 throughput (using case 1 methodology above) may be compared with the rank-2 throughput (using Case 2 methodology), and rank-1 may be chosen if its throughput is better. The reason for this is that Case 1 may provide very low C/I (Carrier-to-Interference Power Ratio) compared to Case 2.
Cases 3, 4:
For case 3, let wA (size NTA×2) and wB (size NTB×1) be the rank-2 and rank-1 precoders selected for the links A and B respectively.
For case 4, let wA (size NTA×1) and wB (size NTB×2) be the rank-1 and rank-2 precoders selected for the links A and B respectively.
Then the rank-2 precoder for the link AB may be given by WAB=UABPABVAB, where
and VAB is a 3×2 orthonormal (orthogonal) matrix (VHABVAB=I). WAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×2, UAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×3, PAB is of the size 3×3 and VAB is of the size 3×2. The inter-point codebook in this case is given by a codebook for VAB. The codebook design for VAB may be the same as the design of a rank-2 codebook for 3 antenna ports. An example of a codebook for this case may be given (with x=e(i2π/3)) as follows:
Using the above example codebook (Equation 2) effectively repeats the codebook vector for the link which has a rank of one. To avoid the repetition, the following codebooks may be used:
for the Case 4 (link A has a rank of one and link B has a rank of two) the codebook may be designed as follows:
and for the Case 3 (link A has a rank of one and link B has a rank of two) the codebook may be designed as follows:
An example of how PAB can be fed back to an eNB is to quantize the values of pA1 and pA2 to some range (e.g., between 0.3 and 1.4) by B bits each and then determine pB=√{square root over (3−pA12−pA22)}.
Case 5:
Let wA (size NTA×2) and WB (size NTB×2) be the rank-2 precoders selected for the links A and B respectively. Then the rank-2 precoder for the link AB may be given by WAB=UABPABVAB where
and VAB is a 4×2 orthonormal matrix (VHABVAB=I). WAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×2, UAB is of the size (NTA+NTB)×4, PAB is of the size 4×4 and VAB is of size the 4×2. The inter-point codebook in this case is given by a codebook for VAB. In one embodiment the inter-point codebook VAB has all equal-gain entries. Any rank-2 codebook using four transmitters may be used, for example the LTE codebook may be reused for this case, e.g., see Table 6.3.4.2.3-2 in 3GPP TS 36.211 “Physical Channel and Modulation”. An example of how PAB can be fed back to an eNB is to quantize the values of pA1, pA2, and pB1 to some range (e.g., between 0.3 and 1.4) by B bits each and then determine pB2=√{square root over (4−pA12−pA22−pB12)}.
In any of the above cases the UE may feed back a codebook index (i.e., PMI) for wA, one for wB, one (or more) for PAB, and also one for VAB. The UE may also feed back RIs for link A, link B, and link AB.
It is further noted that the above example (Cases 1-5) is for the case when the UE is receiving DL signals from 2 cells, but a similar approach may be used for the case when the user equipment is transmitting UL signals. Also, the technique disclosed herein can be expanded to more than 2 cells communicating with the user equipment.
Moreover, the embodiments described herein provides a number of novel features which include but are not limited to the following.
A product structure for multi-point feedback (Equation 1) may provide a methodology to incrementally add inter-point spatial information to multiple single cell spatial information to create a multi-point precoding matrix. The spatial information for links A and B may be used to create the spatial information for the multi-point link AB. This follows the natural progression of CoMP schemes from a single cell to a dynamic cell selection to JT-CoMP and is attractive from the point of incrementally adding complexity to the specifications.
Further, the proposed product structure (Equation 1) may support different feedback ranks for the different links (i.e., the ranks of the links A, B and AB can be different). The multi-point precoding matrix of rank-2 or higher from the product structure (e.g., see Equation 1) may form an orthonormal basis. This property holds for single cell precoding matrix codebook definitions in 3GPP TS 36.211 and would be natural to consider in the multi-point case as well.
Still further, the multi-point precoding matrix with product structure can reuse existing single cell precoding codebooks specified in 3GPP TS 36.211, as discussed herein. The multi-point precoding matrix may accommodate different codebook structures for the different transmission points (e.g., cell A may use a codebook optimized for a linear array and cell B may use a codebook designed for a circular array).
Yet further, the multi-point precoding matrix with product structure may accommodate different number of transmit antennas for different transmission points, and NTA may not be equal to NTB. As pointed out above, the multi-point precoding matrix with product structure may be extended to more than two transmission points. For example, multi-point precoding for 4 transmission points each with 2Tx can be supported by using a 3GPP TS 36.211 codebook for 8 transmitters as an intercell codebook.
Furthermore, embodiments of the invention may include the following aspects in reference to the product structure WAB=UABPABVAB.
The time and/or frequency resolution of UAB and VAB feedback may or may not be equal, for example the inter-point precoding matrix VAB may be fed back with a higher time and/or frequency resolution than UAB.
The time and frequency resolution of UAB and VAB feedback may be determined by higher layer signaling or dynamic DL control signaling. The periodicity and offset of UAB and VAB feedback may be determined by the higher layer signaling or dynamic DL control signaling.
The codebooks for inter-point precoding matrix VAB may be sub-sampled to reduce the payload size of a feedback tracking signal/signals (see
A UE may autonomously choose to report UAB and/or VAB for a given feedback instance depending on channel conditions.
A codebook subset restriction using higher layer signaling may be applied to the inter-point codebook for VAB.
The inter-point precoding matrix VAB may be fed back in an aperiodic manner using the PUSCH or a periodic manner using the PUCCH.
The determination of single cell precoding matrices (e.g., for the links A and B) and the inter-point precoding matrix VAB may be implemented jointly at the UE in the above example (cases 2-5). The UE may also determine the single cell precoding matrices first and use those to determine the inter-point precoding matrix.
The rank of the link A, link B, and/or link AB may be fed back (using feedback tracking signal(s), e.g., shown in
The rank decision for the link AB by the UE may determine the codebook used for VAB (e.g., for the rank-1 case only a co-phase is signaled (see case 1) and for the rank-2 case VAB is a codebook of 2×2 matrices).
The power allocation matrix PAB may be determined by the UE and fed back or may be determined at the eNB(s). The UE may also assume an identity power allocation matrix if no power optimization is done. Power may be allocated on a per stream (layer) basis or per eNB or both.
There may be multiple methods of determining the multi-point precoding matrix WAB at the UE. The UE may jointly determine the multi-point precoding matrix with one or more single cell precoding matrices. The UE may also determine single cell precoding matrices first and use them to determine a multi-point precoding matrix. The same consideration may apply to rank and CQI determination.
In the case of retransmissions, the eNB(s) may need to modify the precoding matrix WAB in order to reduce rank, modify power or move to single cell transmission from joint transmissions. These decisions may depend on prior CQI reports from the UE or network conditions (like loading).
To further demonstrate the effectiveness of these embodiments, some simulation results are presented for a 10 MHz LTE downlink in
a shows an exemplary flow chart demonstrating precoding in coordinated multi-point joint transmission, according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention. It is noted that the order of steps shown in
In a method according to the exemplary embodiment, as shown in
In a next step 44, the precoder of the LTE wireless device generates a spatial data stream from the data stream using the multi-point precoding matrix. Then in the final step 46, the LTE wireless device sends formed spatial data streams to corresponding receiver(s).
b shows another exemplary flow chart demonstrating a feedback aspect for forming precoding matrix in coordinated multi-point joint transmission, according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention. It is noted that the order of steps shown in
In a method according to the exemplary embodiment, as shown in
In a next step 52, the LTE wireless device determines one or more parameters for defining multi-point precoding matrix. These parameters may define one or more of (see Equation 1): a single cell precoding matrices for the plurality of cells (e.g., wA, wB in cases 1-5 above) or at least one parameter for the single cell precoding matrices including at least one codeword selected from a codebook, or a rank; a multi-point power allocation matrix for the plurality of cells (e.g., PAB) or at least one parameter for the multi-point power allocation matrix including channel state information based on a spatial data stream signal received by the receiving LTE wireless device; and an inter-point precoding matrix for the plurality of cells (e.g., VAB) or at least one parameter of the inter-point precoding matrix including a codeword selected from a codebook, or a rank.
Then in the final step 54, the LTE wireless device generates and sends feedback (tracking) signal(s) comprising the parameters for defining multi-point precoding matrix to LTE devices(s) of the link(s) engaged in the coordinated multi-point joint transmission.
The signal forming module 100 comprises a precoding matrix defining module 102, a precoder 104, and a processing (e.g., filtering, modulation, etc.) module 106 for implementing exemplary embodiments of the invention demonstrated in
The transmitter 110 and the receiver 112 may be generally means for transmitting/receiving and may be implemented as a transceiver, or a structural equivalence (equivalent structure) thereof.
Various embodiments of the at least one memory 120 (e.g., computer readable memory) may include any data storage technology type which is suitable to the local technical environment, including but not limited to semiconductor based memory devices, magnetic memory devices and systems, optical memory devices and systems, fixed memory, removable memory, disc memory, flash memory, DRAM, SRAM, EEPROM and the like. Various embodiments of the processor 108 include but are not limited to general purpose computers, special purpose computers, microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs) and multi-core processors.
The signal forming module 100, or each of the modules 102, 104 and 106 may be implemented as an application computer program stored, e.g., in the at least one memory 120, but in general it may be implemented as a software, a firmware and/or a hardware module or a combination thereof. In particular, in the case of software or firmware, one embodiment may be implemented using a software related product such as a computer readable memory (e.g., a non-transitory computer readable memory), computer readable medium or a computer readable storage structure comprising computer readable instructions (e.g., program instructions) using a computer program code (i.e., the software or firmware) thereon to be executed by a computer processor.
Furthermore, the module 100, 102, 104 or 106 may be implemented as a separate block or may be combined with any other module/block of the module 100 or it may be split into several blocks according to their functionality. Moreover, it is noted that all or selected modules of the module 100 may be implemented using an integrated circuit (e.g., using an application specific integrated circuit, ASIC).
The signal forming module 130 comprises a processing module 132 for processing (e.g., de-coding, filtering, demodulation, etc.) of the spatial data signal 118a received in step 50 of
The transmitter 110a and the receiver 112a may be generally means for transmitting/receiving and may be implemented as a transceiver, or a structural equivalence (equivalent structure) thereof.
Various embodiments of the at least one memory 120a (e.g., computer readable memory) may include any data storage technology type which is suitable to the local technical environment, including but not limited to semiconductor based memory devices, magnetic memory devices and systems, optical memory devices and systems, fixed memory, removable memory, disc memory, flash memory, DRAM, SRAM, EEPROM and the like. Various embodiments of the processor 108a include but are not limited to general purpose computers, special purpose computers, microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs) and multi-core processors.
The signal forming module 130, or each of the modules 132, 134 and 136 may be implemented as an application computer program stored, e.g., in the at least one memory 120a, but in general it may be implemented as a software, a firmware and/or a hardware module or a combination thereof. In particular, in the case of software or firmware, one embodiment may be implemented using a software related product such as a computer readable memory (e.g., a non-transitory computer readable memory), computer readable medium or a computer readable storage structure comprising computer readable instructions (e.g., program instructions) using a computer program code (i.e., the software or firmware) thereon to be executed by a computer processor.
Furthermore, the module 130, 132, 134 or 136 may be implemented as a separate block or may be combined with any other module/block of the module 130 or it may be split into several blocks according to their functionality. Moreover, it is noted that all or selected modules of the module 130 may be implemented using an integrated circuit (e.g., using an application specific integrated circuit, ASIC).
Each LTE wireless device (e.g., UE, eNB) involved in coordinated multi-point joint transmission may comprise both, the module 100 shown in
It is noted that various non-limiting embodiments described herein may be used separately, combined or selectively combined for specific applications.
Further, some of the various features of the above non-limiting embodiments may be used to advantage without the corresponding use of other described features. The foregoing description should therefore be considered as merely illustrative of the principles, teachings and exemplary embodiments of this invention, and not in limitation thereof.
It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are only illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Numerous modifications and alternative arrangements may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention, and the appended claims are intended to cover such modifications and arrangements.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20120099470 | Li et al. | Apr 2012 | A1 |
20130010880 | Koivisto et al. | Jan 2013 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
“System Performance of JP-CoMP in Homogeneous Networks with RRHs”, NTT DOCOMO, 3GPP TSG RAN WG1 Meeting #65, R1-111637, May 2011, 9 pgs. |
“Further Phase-1 Evaluations of Joint Transmission and DCS”, Motorola Mobility, 3GPP TSG RAN1 #65, R1-111600, May 2011, 8 pgs. |
“3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Radio Access Network; Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Physical Channel and Modulation (Release 10), Section 6.3.4”, 3GPP TYS 36.211 V10.2.0, Jun. 2011, 16 pgs. |
Alcatel-Lucent Shanghai Bell et al: “Multipoint CSI Feedback”; 3GPP Draft; R1-113318—Final, 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), Mobile Competence Centre; 650, Route des Lucioles; F-06921 Sophia-Antipolis Cedex; France; vol. RAN WG1, No. Zhuhai; 20111010, Oct. 7, 2011, XP050538611, [retrieved on Oct. 7, 2011], Chapter 3; p. 2. |
Alcatel-Lucent Shanghai Bell et al: “Considerations on CSI feedback enhancements for high-priority antenna configurations” 3GPP Draft; R1-112420 Considerations on CSI Feedback enhancements for high-priority antenna Configurations—clean; 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), Mobile Competence Centre; 650, Route des Lucioles; F-06921 Sophia-Antipolis Cedex; France; vol. RAN WG1, No. Athens, Greece; 20110822, Aug. 18, 2011, XP050537814, [retrieved on Aug. 18, 2011]; Chapter3.1 and 4; pp. 2-4. |
Nokia Siemens Networks et al: “Further DL CoMP phasel simulation results”; 3GPP Draft; R1-111276, 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), Mobile Competence Centre; 650, Route des Lucioles; F-06921 Sophia-Antipolis Cedex; France; vol. RAN WG1, No. Barcelona, Spain; 20110509, Apr. 15, 2011, XP050490959, [retrieved on Apr. 15, 2011] Chapter 4; p. 3. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20130094604 A1 | Apr 2013 | US |