System and method for detecting a link outage

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6622006
  • Patent Number
    6,622,006
  • Date Filed
    Monday, October 2, 2000
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 16, 2003
    20 years ago
Abstract
A communications system has a high altitude communication device generates a plurality of user link beams having a first communication characteristic and a feeder link having a first communication characteristic. A gateway terminal receives the user link beam for receiving a first received signal and a second received signal thereafter. The receiver circuit has a recursive filter for generating differential amplitude of symbol timing estimate from said first received signal.
Description




TECHNICAL FIELD




The present invention relates generally to communications systems, and more particularly, to outage detection in a time division multiplex communications systems.




BACKGROUND ART




In this communication age, content providers are increasingly investigating ways in which to provide more content to users as well as interfacing with users.




Communication satellites have become commonplace for use in many types of communication services, e.g., data transfer, voice communications, television spot beam coverage, and other data transfer applications. As such, satellites transmit and receive large amounts of signals used in either a “bent pipe” or “spot array” configuration to transmit signals to desired geographic locations on the earth.




Because the frequency of resources is scarce for over-the-air transmission, various encoding schemes are used to provide a greater number of communication signals within an allocated communication band. Such encoding schemes include code division multiple access (CDMA), time division multiple access (TDMA), frequency division multiple access (FDMA), or combination of these schemes. Further, to prevent interference the schemes may operate at various frequencies.




In TDMA mobile transmission systems, occasional channel impairments are inevitable. This may occur due to a link outage due to a full obstruction of the radio path. Blockage of the radio path may result in a receive signal being weak or extremely noisy. Commonly, when an outage occurs no-target tracking or drifting of synchronization systems occurs.




Outage detection is conventionally based on observation of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) or a cyclic redundancy check (CRC). The application of SNR is constrained by its limited confidence range. That is, reliable detection may not be achieved when the channel condition is unfavorable. In its implementation, a CRC is usually performed on different hardware from that of the demodulation hardware. Thus, such systems require complicated logic signaling interactions. For both SNR and CRC based systems, the detection is performed after the demodulation. Because of this, the computation is lengthy.




It would therefore be desirable to design an simple outage detection procedure with less computation that also allows quick resumption of transmission and reliable maintenance of synchronization after an outage occurrence.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




It is therefore one object of the invention to provide an improved outage detection system in a TDMA system.




In one aspect of the invention, a method for operating a communication system comprises the steps of:




receiving a received signal;




estimating a differential symbol timing from two consecutive bursts;




generating a detection metric;




comparing the obtained detection metric with predetermined threshold to determine the outage status.




In one aspect of the invention, a high altitude communication device generates a plurality of user link beams having a first communication characteristic and a feeder link having a first communication characteristic. A gateway terminal receives the user link beam. A user terminal has a receiver circuit for receiving a first received signal and a second received signal thereafter. The receiver circuit has a recursive filter for generating an amplitude estimate from said first received signal.




One advantage of the invention is that system detection accuracy may be increased by using further techniques such as dual threshold detection and multiple observation in addition to the basic amplitude determination.











Other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent when viewed in light of the detailed description of the preferred embodiment when taken in conjunction with the attached drawings and appended claims.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a system level view of the communication system according to the present invention.





FIG. 2

is a high level block diagrammatic view of a receiving device having a receiver according to the present invention.





FIG. 3

is a flow chart of an outage detection process according to the present invention.





FIG. 4

is a graphical illustration of an outage and detection window according to the present invention.





FIG. 5

is a statistical distribution of differential amplitude of symbol timing from normal transmission and channel outage





FIG. 6

is a statistical distribution of differential amplitude of symbol timing from normal transmission and channel outage when the symbol timing is estimated from short burst.





FIG. 7

is a plot of a detection metric profile according to the present invention when M=1.





FIG. 8

is a plot of a detection metric profile according to the present invention when M=10.











BEST MODES FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION




In the following description, the same reference numerals are used to identify the same components in the various views. Those skilled in the art will recognize that various other embodiments, structural changes and changes in measures may be made without departing from the scope of the invention.




Referring now to

FIG. 1

, a communications system


10


has a cell pattern


12


that is illustrated as a plurality of hexagon on the earth's surface. The hexagons represent the footprint of a radiated beam onto the earth's surface. These are otherwise known as cells


14


. Each cell


14


represents a geographic area that can receive a signal with a predetermined signal strength. A plurality of user terminals


16


M and


16


F are used to illustrate mobile users and fixed users, respectively. Mobile users


16


M may comprise but are not limited to automotive applications, personal digital assistant applications and cellular phone applications. Fixed user terminals


16


F may, for example, comprise business-base or home-base communication systems. Each user terminal


16


F and


16


M may receive a signal with the predetermined signal strength or receive an antenna radiation spot in a spot beam pattern that is available from high altitude communication device


18


.




Communication system


10


further includes a gateway station


20


that is coupled to terrestrial networks


22


. Communication system may also include a device operations center


24


. Both gateway station


20


and device operations center


24


are in communication with high altitude communication device


18


. Gateway station


20


provides a link between user terminals


16


F,


16


M and terrestrial networks


22


through high altitude communications device


18


. Device operation center


24


provides command and control functions to communications device


18


. Although illustrated as two separate units, gateway station


20


and device operation center


24


may be combined into the same physical location.




The communication signals between high altitude communication device


18


and user terminals


16


M and


16


F may be referred to as user links


26


. User links


26


represent the transmit and receive beams from both user device


16


F,


16


M and high altitude communications device


18


. A feeder link


28


is defined between high altitude communications device


18


and gateway station


20


.




High altitude communications device


18


may, for example, be a low earth orbit satellite (“LEO”), middle earth orbit satellite (“SO”) or a geo-stationary satellite (“GEO”). Also, communications device


16


may also be comprised of a stratosphere-base platform such as those under development by AeroVironment. Helios is one such project being developed by AeroVironment. The Helios stratospheric platform is an unmanned vehicle that can fly for several months at an altitude of about 60,000 feet above the earth. Helios is a solar-powered, electric plane that is modular in design and may be configured in a variety of ways. The stratospheric platform is operated through the device operations center


24


to fly in a small radius flight path over a given spot on the earth.




High altitude communications device


18


is used as a communication node for gateway station


20


and user terminals


16


F and


16


M, each of which have an antennas that are pointed in the direction of the high altitude communications device


18


. Although only one gateway station


20


is illustrated in the figure, those skilled in the art would recognize that various numbers of gateway stations may be employed. As would be further described below, gateway is station


20


with an antenna that has a beam width wide enough to maintain a communication link with high altitude communication device


18


throughout the flight path. In the case of medium earth orbit and low earth orbit satellites, the antennas of these devices may be electronically steered.




High altitude communication device


18


has a controller 30 that is used to control the communication with user terminal


16


M,


16


F and gateway station


20


. In the present example, the controller


30


is used to generate a plurality of beams in a time division multiple access system.




Referring now to

FIG. 2

, a generic receiving device


40


is illustrated. The generic receiving device


40


may include one of the devices above such as user terminals


16


F,


16


M and the high altitude communication device


18


. The receiving device


40


has a control circuit


42


coupled to antenna


44


. The control circuit


42


is preferably microprocessor-based and is capable of processing the received signal as is further described below. The control circuit


42


provides a processed signal to a demodulator


46


. This is advantageous from the prior art which required demodulation prior to signal processing.




Referring now to

FIG. 3

, in the following description various types of transmissions or combinations of transmissions may be used. For example, FACCH3, DKAB or TCH3 may be used. Control circuit


42


is illustrated in more detail. Control circuit


42


has a differential recursive filtering block


54


, an averaging sliding window block


56


, a dual-threshold detection block


58


, and a multiple observation block


60


. Each block improves the results of the previous block. The description of each of the blocks will now be taken in turn.




The differential recursive filtering block


54


uses a recursive filter to obtain the differential amplitude over the estimated symbol timing. To perform outage detection is necessary to prevent no-target tracking once an outage occurs. To perform outage detection a detection metric is obtained from the symbol timing.




Referring now to

FIG. 4

, the symbol timing is estimated as








{circumflex over (τ)}




p




≈{circumflex over (τ)}




p−1





t


δ


p


  Equation (1)






where γ


t


<1 is a forgetting factor which controls both bandwidth and gain of the recursive filter. δ


p


is obtained with direct estimation of amplitude from the received burst,










c
1




(
p
)



=


exp


(

j2





π




τ
^


p
-
1


/
T


)







k
=
0


NM
-
1









Z
k

·

exp


(


-
j2






π






k
/
M


)









Equation






(
2
)





















δ
p

=


T

2

π




arg


(

c
1




(
p
)



)







Equation






(
3
)














Referring now to

FIG. 5

, based on this differential amplitude, the detection metric is defined as













Φ
^

L



(
i
)


=


E


&LeftDoubleBracketingBar;


δ
^

j

&RightDoubleBracketingBar;






j

=
i


,

,

i
+
L
-
1





Equation






(
4
)














where L is the length of sliding window for averaging process E[ ] is illustrated in FIG.


4


. Appropriately large number of samples L should be considered for stable Φ


L


(i) Simulation demonstrates that L=25 is an adequate choice. The outage duration D is determined between a first time·


a


and a second time·


b


(a first and second received signal).




As mentioned above, a transmission channel transmission can be FACCH3, DKAB or TCH3. DKAB is an interim burst carrying only 10 symbols during traffic inactivity. The timing estimation performance varies with the bursts transmitted under different operation conditions.

FIG. 5

shows the statistical distribution of the detection metric of FACCH3. The distribution was formed under a fading channel condition with K=9 dB, f


d


=10 Hz, and Es/N0=−0.5 dB. The outage detection with no false alarm is easily achievable by a single threshold classification.




When transmission of FACCH is mixed with DKAB, especially with higher percentage of the latter, the detection is not straightforward. This is due to the fact that DKAB carries less data symbols, and thus the timing estimation is poor, especially when Es/N0 is as low as −0.5 dB. This is the lowest operation condition for DKAB. Although a minimum-duty cycle is maintained during signaling phase, that is, at least 16% FACCH vs. 84% DKAB are transmitted, larger variation of {circumflex over (Φ)}


L


(i)can still be expected.

FIG. 6

shows the histograms of {circumflex over (Φ)}


L


(i)from minimum-duty cycle transmission. They are obtained under the Rician fading channel condition with K=9 dB, f


d


=10 Hz. The upper portion illustrates the transmission at Es/N0=−0.5 dB while the lower portion the case of outage. It can be seen that these two distributions are largely overlapped over each other. One single boundary for error-free classification does not exist. To perform reliable detection, special procedures have to be applied to account for such detection difficulty. Though they usually come at the cost of detection delay, the impact is negligent as long as the timing is maintained close to the target through the outage.




To achieve reliable detection in the case as illustrated in

FIG. 6

, supplemental procedures may be used. These are described in further detail below.




When an outage occurs, the symbol timing {circumflex over (τ)}


p


drifts by way of a “random walk”, which is reflected by the detection metric {circumflex over (Φ)}


L


(i) The metric, however, may not be a reliable indicator of the end of outage. This is due to the fact that the timing may not be maintained close to the true value during outage.




On the other hand, the true timing variation, if any, is relatively. For the following description the assumed outage is no more than 6 seconds. This may, for example, be a design constraint of the system At the average rate of {dot over (τ)}=0.2 μs/second, the true timing shifts around 1.2 μs. With minor adjustment, the differential recursive timing estimation of Equation (3) may still be utilized for detection.




When an outage is detected at burst p′, estimation using Equation (1) is performed as,






{circumflex over (τ)}


p


={circumflex over (τ)}


p






0






−N


+γ·{circumflex over (δ)}


p




p>p




0


  Equation (6)






where {circumflex over (τ)}


p






0






−N


is the estimated timing prior to outage. Based on δ


p


from Equation (6), the metric by Equation (4) reflects the statistical variation when the outage is over.




As shown in

FIG. 4

, there is an overlap between the two distributions. Reliable detection may not be obtained with one single threshold. The solution is thus the status-dependent dual-threshold procedure, of block


48


of FIG.


3


.




Let χ


1


and χ


2


denote two presumed threshold quantities of χ


1





2


. A detection state D(i) is 1 for regular transmission and 0 for outage. Depending on the state D(i−1) of burst i−1, either χ


1


or χ


2


is used accordingly. During normal transmission, χ


1


is used for detection,











When






D


(

i
-
1

)



=
1

,






D


(
i
)


=

{




0
,





if


&LeftBracketingBar;



Φ
^

L



(
i
)


&RightBracketingBar;


>

χ
1







1
,





if


&LeftBracketingBar;



Φ
^

L



(
i
)


&RightBracketingBar;




χ
1











Equation






(
7
)














and the χ


1


is used during outage,











When






D


(

i
-
1

)



=
0

,






D


(
i
)


=

{




0
,





if


&LeftBracketingBar;



Φ
~

L



(
i
)


&RightBracketingBar;


>

χ
2







1
,





if


&LeftBracketingBar;



Φ
~

L



(
i
)


&RightBracketingBar;




χ
2











Equation






(
8
)














By using the above detection procedure with state-dependent dual-threshold, the reliability is largely enhanced, though it comes at inevitable detection delay.




Referring now to

FIG. 7

, a profile of detection metric {tilde over (Φ)}


L


(i)with one occurrence of outage is shown. The polarity indicates the detection status. Positive {tilde over (Φ)}


L


(i)represents regular transmission while negative the occurrence of outage. They are obtained under the Rician fading channel with Es/N0=−0.5 dB, and Es/N0=−200 dB respectively. The true outage occurs from burst frame


4701


to


4825


, as indicated by the vertical solid lines


80


. With threshold χ


1


=10 and χ


2


=8, the actual detection is indicated by the polarity transition. Detection delay can be seen by the laps of the polarity transition following the solid lines. In addition, one false alarm occurs around burst frame


4650


.




In

FIG. 4

, N


delay1


and N


delay2


are the detection delays due to statistical averaging. Although no transmitted signal is received during outage, detection delay N


delay1


should be considered for recursive filtering of Equation (6) to prevent random drifting involved.




In addition to the dual-threshold procedure of combining Equation (7) and Equation (8), another procedure is described in this section as a supplemental approach for further improvement of detection. Instead of making the detection decision from one single {circumflex over (Φ)}


L


(i), multiple observation using multiple observation block


50


over consecutive {circumflex over (Φ)}


L


(i) has been found to provide better decision statistics.




Let N(i) denote a counter










N


(
i
)


=





M
-
1



m
=
0




D


(

i
-
m

)







Equation  (9)













where D(i) is the detection state as defined in Equation (7) and Equation (8).




Then detection decision is made as











D
_



(
i
)


=

{




1
,






if






N


(
i
)



=
M







0
,






if






N


(
i
)



<
M





&AutoRightMatch;





Equation  (10)













where 1 and 0 of {overscore (D)}(i)indicates regular transmission and outage respectively as for D(i).




To some extent, the multiple-observations are equivalent to extending the length of sliding window L in Equation (4). Considering the individual randomness, however, they are not exactly the same. Simulation demonstrates that multiple observation provides extra capability of reducing occurrence of false alarms.




In operation, the combination of the section above the differential amplitudes δ


i


is first obtained by performing the differential recursive filtering over the estimated symbol timing. As described in above, estimation with constant reference is implemented during outage for better timing and detection performance. A mode switching is thus involved,











τ
^

p

=

{







τ
^


p
-
1


+

γ
·


δ
^

p



,







D
_



(
i
)


=
1










τ
^



p
0

-
N


+

γ
·


δ
^

p



,







D
_



(
i
)


=
0










Equation  (11)













where {overscore (D)}(i)is the detection decision of Equation (10) with 1 and 0 indicating regular transmission and outage respectively. When the outage is over, the regular differential recursive filtering is resumed, and any discrepancy between the tracking loop and the true timing is limited which decreases quickly after the regular recursive filtering resumes.




By performing Equation (4) with L=25, the detection metric {circumflex over (Φ)}


L


(i)is obtained. Based on this quantity, detection state D(i) are declared by Equation (7) or Equation (8), depending on the previous state. As described above, multiple-observations may be employed to prevent false alarms. More observations leads to longer detection delay. Simulation demonstrates that M=10 in Equation (10) provides a good compromise between delay and detection reliability. The detection decision is thus made as {overscore (D)}(i).





FIG. 8

shows the same detection process as that of FIG.


7


. Instead of M=1 in

FIG. 7

, however, M=10 is applied. It can be seen that the false alarm as shown in

FIG. 8

is eliminated due the multiple-observation detection. Obviously it is achieved with extra detection delay.




Although the distribution of detection metric exhibits large overlap between the cases of regular transmission and outage, reliable detection can still be achieved at the cost of extra detection delay. With closed-loop estimation, the impact of detection delay is negligible for both timing and detection. Therefore it is believed that the proposed scheme is desirable procedure for maintaining timing and frequency synchronization through short link outage. In addition, the scenario may also be extended to the frequency estimator for anti-lock detection.




While particular embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, numerous variations alternate embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only in terms of the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. A communication system comprising:a receiver circuit for receiving a first received signal and a second received signal thereafter, said receiver circuit having a recursive filter for generating an differential amplitude of a symbol timing estimate from said first received signal.
  • 2. A communication system as recited in claim 1 wherein said recursive filter generates a sliding window having a predetermined length.
  • 3. A communication system as recited in claim 1 wherein said receiver circuit establishes a first threshold and a second threshold between which outage is determined.
  • 4. A communication system as recited in claim 1 wherein said receiver circuit generates the differential amplitude estimate from a first observation and a second observation.
  • 5. A method of operating a communication system comprises the steps of:receiving a received signal; estimating a symbol timing; generating an differential amplitude estimate during the symbol timing; and, indicating an outage in response to the amplitude estimate.
  • 6. A method as recited in claim 5, further comprising the steps of performing multiple observation to obtain an amplitude estimate.
  • 7. A method as recited in claim 5 further comprising the step of generating a first threshold and a second threshold for performing the step of generating an amplitude estimate.
  • 8. A method as recited in claim 7 wherein said first threshold corresponds to an outage.
  • 9. A method as recited in claim 7 wherein said second threshold corresponds to a regular transmission.
  • 10. A communication system comprising:a high altitude communication device generating a plurality of user link beams and a feeder link beam; a gateway terminal receiving the user link beam; a user terminal receiving at least one of said user link beams, said user terminal comprising a receiver circuit for receiving a received signal, said receiver circuit for receiving a first received signal and a second received signal thereafter; said receiver circuit having a recursive filter for generating an amplitude estimate from said first received signal.
  • 11. A system as recited in claim 10 wherein said high altitude communication device comprises a stratospheric platform.
  • 12. A communication system as recited in claim 10 wherein said high altitude communication device comprises a satellite.
  • 13. A communication system as recited in claim 10 wherein said gateway terminal is coupled to a terrestrial network.
RELATED APPLICATION

This application claims priority to Provisional Application No. 60/179,682, entitled “Robust Link Outage Detection” filed on Feb. 2, 2000.

US Referenced Citations (8)
Number Name Date Kind
4969163 Ungerboeck Nov 1990 A
5740204 Nagashima Apr 1998 A
5794155 Andresen et al. Aug 1998 A
5828957 Kroeger et al. Oct 1998 A
5859874 Wiedeman et al. Jan 1999 A
6144708 Maruyama Nov 2000 A
6181732 Komatsu Jan 2001 B1
6490328 Wu Dec 2002 B1
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/179682 Feb 2000 US