Claims
- 1. A training sequence for a radio communications system comprising:
a core sequence of symbols; a successive repetition of the core sequence; and a marker sequence having sequence of symbols different from the core sequence.
- 2. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the core sequence is transmitted as binary symbols and the marker sequence is equal and opposite in sign to the core sequence.
- 3. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the core sequence augmented with the marker sequence forms a vector that is orthogonal to a vector formed by the core sequence augmented with the core sequence.
- 4. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the marker sequence follows the repetition of the core sequence.
- 5. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the marker sequence precedes the repetition of the core sequence.
- 6. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the repetition of the core sequence has a duration longer than the maximum round trip delay time from a terminal transmitting the training sequence to a terminal receiving the training sequence and back.
- 7. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the repetition of the core sequence has a duration longer than a duration of a beam forming analysis window plus the maximum round trip delay time from a terminal transmitting the training sequence to a terminal receiving the training sequence and back.
- 8. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the repetition of the core sequence has a duration longer than the maximum round trip delay time from a terminal transmitting the training sequence to a terminal receiving the training sequence and back plus a random delay applied by the terminal transmitting the training sequence.
- 9. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the repetition of the core sequence comprises a repetition of the core sequence successively a specified number of times.
- 10. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the core sequence consists essentially of 12 symbols.
- 11. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the core sequence has a normalized cross-correlation of about ⅓.
- 12. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the core sequence has a normalized autocorrelation of about ⅓.
- 13. The training sequence of claim 1 wherein the absolute value of the mean of th e core sequence is about zero.
- 14. A method comprising:
generating a core sequence of symbols; generating a successive repetition of the core sequence; and generating a marker sequence having sequence of symbols different from the core sequence; combining the repetition of the core sequence and marker sequence to form a training sequence; and transmitting the training sequence with a communications burst in a radio communications system.
- 15. The method of claim 14 wherein transmitting the training sequence comprises transmitting binary symbols and wherein generating the marker sequence comprises generating a marker sequence that is equal and opposite in sign to the core sequence.
- 16. The method of claim 14 wherein the core sequence augmented with the marker sequence forms a vector that is orthogonal to a vector formed by the core sequence augmented with the core sequence.
- 17. The method of claim 14 wherein the repetition of the core sequence has a duration longer than the maximum round trip delay time from a terminal transmitting the training sequence to a terminal receiving the training sequence and back.
- 18. The method of claim 14 wherein the core sequence has a normalized cross-correlation of about ⅓.
- 19. The method of claim 14 wherein the core sequence has a normalized autocorrelation of about ⅓.
- 20. The method of claim 14 wherein the absolute value of the mean of the core sequence is about zero.
- 21. A machine-readable medium having stored thereon data representing sequences of instructions which, when executed by a machine, cause the machine to perform operations comprising:
generating a core sequence of symbols; generating a successive repetition of the core sequence; and generating a marker sequence having sequence of symbols different from the core sequence; combining the repetition of the core sequence and marker sequence to form a training sequence; and transmitting the training sequence with a communications burst in a radio communications system.
- 22. The medium of claim 21 wherein transmitting the training sequence comprises transmitting binary symbols and wherein generating the marker sequence comprises generating a marker sequence that is equal and opposite in sign to the core sequence.
- 23. The medium of claim 21 wherein the core sequence augmented with the marker sequence forms a vector that is orthogonal to a vector formed by the core sequence augmented with the core sequence.
- 24. The medium of claim 21 wherein the repetition of the core sequence has a duration longer than the maximum round trip delay time from a terminal transmitting the training sequence to a terminal receiving the training sequence and back.
- 25. The medium of claim 21 wherein the core sequence has a normalized cross-correlation of about ⅓.
- 26. The medium of claim 21 wherein the core sequence has a normalized autocorrelation of about ⅓.
- 27. The medium of claim 21 wherein the absolute value of the mean of the core sequence is about zero.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/727,063, filed Nov. 30, 2000.
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09727063 |
Nov 2000 |
US |
Child |
10079620 |
Feb 2002 |
US |