This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. 365 of International Application PCT/EP02/02078, filed Feb. 27, 2002, which was published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) on Sep. 12, 2002 in English and which claims the benefit of French patent application No. 0103345, filed Mar. 8, 2001.
1. Technical Field
The invention relates to a transmitting device limiting out-of-band interferences.
Digital modulation is used more and more for satellite and terrestrial transmission. Several types of modulation are used, but they all consist in the transmission of symbols which are coded in terms of phase and of amplitude, possibly on several carriers.
2. Prior Art
In theory, it is possible to carry out direct modulation, that is to say to modulate the carrier frequency directly. However, the digital systems are generally placed in internal units which are not subjected to strong variations in temperature, whereas the antennae are placed outside at some distance. For this reason, an intermediate-frequency band, lower than the transmitting-frequency band, is generally used to form the link between the internal unit and the external unit, frequency transposition being carried out in the external unit.
Moreover, if a multi-channel type transmission system is used, it is necessary to have recourse to variable channel transposition when it is not possible to have frequency agility upon modulation. A frequency-transposition stage employing an oscillator makes it possible to provide the frequency agility.
Given the nature of the modulation, it proves simpler to carry out the modulation in digital mode. However, integrated circuits have operating limits, especially as regards digital/analog converters. In order to transmit a digital signal, it is known to have recourse to low-frequency modulation followed by a transposition to a higher frequency at which the conjugate image of the signal to be transmitted is eliminated more easily.
It is known, for example, to have recourse to a transmission path as represented in
As is known in prior art, a coding device, not represented, codes the data and supplies modulating signals R(s) and I(s) which correspond, for example, to a train of complex symbols to be transmitted. The modulation takes place, for example, according to a known technique by the use of two mixers 11 and 12 each receiving a modulating signal R(s) and I(s) and a signal of given frequency Cos(ωt) or Sin(ωt). An adder circuit 13 adds the signals originating from the mixers 11 and 12. A filter 14 keeps the useful part of the signal originating from the adder circuit 13.
The second stage 20 carries out frequency transposition and filtering which are for the purpose of shifting the useful band of the signal into higher frequencies.
The third stage 30 implements the frequency agility by the use of a mixer 31, of a local oscillator LO2 of variable frequency and of a filter 32 which suppresses the image and harmonic frequencies of the transposition.
The fourth stage 40 is generally situated close to the antenna and carries out the transposition into the transmission band, lying, for example, between 14 and 14.53 GHz, as well as the power amplification so as to transmit the signal.
The transmission bands are allocated by regulatory authorities. The regulatory authorities set the conditions for use of these bands, and especially the maximum noise level radiated outside the allocated band, in a very strict way, so as not to upset the users of adjacent bands. The parasitic effects 109 situated outside the band have to be below a threshold determined by the monitoring authorities. This threshold may be very low. The attenuation of the out-of-band interferences with respect to the useful signal is 60 dB, for example.
The person skilled in the art is confronted with several solutions for complying with the variable thresholds. A first solution consists in not using all of the allocated band, such that the part 111 lies in the allocated frequency band. A second solution consists in using high-rejection filters, which are very difficult to produce and which may distort the signal and degrade the performance of the transmission system. A third solution consists in carrying out the modulation at higher frequency, which amounts to spacing the image spectrum and the spectral line of the local oscillator away from the useful signal, but which dictates carrying out the modulation in analog mode, with the use of lower-performance discrete components.
The invention proposes to produce a modulation device making it possible, on the one hand, to use the whole of the allocated frequency band, without using filters with a high rejection ratio, making it possible to carry out the modulation at a relatively low frequency. According to the invention, modulation is done normally or with inversion of the spectrum. Next, a supradyne or infradyne frequency transposition is carried out, such that the parasitic effects arising from the modulation are always situated in the frequency band allocated for the transmission.
The invention is a method of transmitting data on at least one channel included in at least one authorized transmitting-frequency band. Depending on the position of the channel in the authorized transmitting-frequency band, either a first modulated signal is produced, corresponding to the modulation of a first frequency by the use of the data then the first modulated signal is transposed, in infradyne fashion, into a predetermined frequency band, or a second modulated signal is produced, the spectrum of which corresponds to the inverted spectrum of the first modulated signal, then the second modulated signal is transposed, in supradyne fashion, into the predetermined frequency band.
The terms “infradyne” and “supradyne” relate here to the signal resulting from the transposition. When a transposition is carried out in infradyne fashion, that means to say that the frequency of the local oscillator is less than the useful signal resulting from the transposition. When a transposition is carried out in supradyne fashion, that means to say that the frequency of the local oscillator is higher than the useful signal resulting from the transposition.
After the transposition, a filtering of the first or of the second modulated signal is preferably carried out, by the use of a filter the template of which corresponds to the predetermined frequency band.
The invention is also a device for transmitting data on at least one channel included in at least one authorized transmitting-frequency band, the device including means for producing a modulated signal on the basis of data to be transmitted, means for inverting or not inverting the spectrum of the modulated signal on the basis of the position of the channel in the authorized transmitting-frequency band, means for producing a signal for transposition to a first or to a second frequency, selection means for selecting one or other of the first and second frequencies on the basis of the position of the channel in the authorized transmitting-frequency band, and means for producing a transposed signal from the transposition signal and from the modulated signal.
The device preferably includes filtering means for filtering the transposed signal.
The invention will be better understood, and other particular features and advantages will become apparent on reading the description which will follow, the description making reference to the attached drawings, among which:
The previously described
The transmitting device of
The first stage carries out modulation in phase and in amplitude, also known by the name of constellation modulation. The data are coded in symbols by the use of a coding device of a known type which is not represented in
The modulation is carried out by the use of two mixers 11 and 12, each receiving a modulating signal R(s) and I(s). One of the mixers 11 receives a signal with frequency ω/2π and the other mixer 12 receives the same signal phase-shifted by plus or minus π/2 depending on a control signal. The fact of selecting the phase shift of plus or minus π/2 has the effect of making it possible to invert or not invert the spectrum of the modulated signal with respect to the frequency ω/2π. An adder circuit 13 adds the signals originating from the mixers 11 and 12, and a filter 14 keeps only the useful part of the signal originating from the adder circuit 13.
In one preferred example, the first stage 10 is implemented by the use of a circuit which carries out the mixing, the addition and the filtering in digital mode, the signal being converted to analog at the output of the first stage 10. The mixing takes place in digital mode by multiplying two trains of data. The selection of the phase shift of plus or minus π/2 is done very simply either by selecting one train of data from two or by carrying out multiplication by −1. In such a case, the filter 14 can be formed by the analog/digital conversion device.
The second stage 20 carries out frequency transposition and filtering which are for the purpose of shifting the signal modulated by the stage 10 into higher frequencies. A mixer 21 receives the modulated signal, on the one hand, and a transposition signal, on the other hand. The transposition signal can have two frequency values. In the preferred example, a changeover switch 23 selects one oscillator between oscillators LOinf and LOsup. A filter 22 will keep a frequency band corresponding to the useful band of the modulated signal after the transposition. The template 103 of the filter is determined so as to let through a spectrum with the width of the modulated signal. The frequency of the oscillator LOinf is determined in such a way that the transposition of the modulated signal by the use of the oscillator LOinf brings the positive part of the modulated signal into the template 103 of the filter 22, which corresponds to a transposition of infradyne type. The frequency of the oscillator LOsup is determined in such a way that the transposition of the modulated signal by the use of the oscillator LOsup brings the negative part of the modulated signal into the template 103 of the filter 22, which corresponds to a transposition of supradyne type. It is convenient for the central frequency of the modulated signal after the transposition in infradyne or supradyne fashion to be placed at the same spot in the template 103 of the filter 22.
The changeover switch 23 receives the control signal so as to carry out an infradyne transposition when the modulation is done with a signal phase shifted by +π/2, and to carry out supradyne modulation when the modulation is done with a signal phase shifted by −π/2.
The third stage 30 implements the frequency agility by the use of a mixer 31, a variable-frequency oscillator LO2 and a filter 32 which suppresses the image and harmonic frequencies of the transposition. The frequency offset between the useful signal and the zero frequency is much larger at the output of the second stage 20 than at the output of the first stage 10. That being so, the leakages from the mixer 31 as well as all the images resulting from the transposition carried out by the mixer 31 are sufficiently far removed from the edges of the template 105 of the filter 32 to be correctly rejected without requiring substantial constraints on the filter 32. In order to avoid having parasitic effects resulting from the transposition of the second stage 20 on the edges of the template 105, it is convenient to have carried out a supradyne transposition when the useful signal lies back in the lower part of the template 105 and to have carried out an infradyne transposition when the useful signal lies back in the upper part of the template 105. All the parasitic effects resulting from the transposition of the second stage 20 are found placed within the template 105.
The fourth stage 40 includes a mixer 41, a filter 42, a power amplifier 43 and an antenna 44. The mixer 41 transposes the signal leaving the third stage 30 into the transmitting-frequency band. The filter 42 eliminates the image frequencies of the transposition.
With the invention, the out-of-band interferences are brought back within the transmission band. As the person skilled in the art knows, the level of the parasitic effects authorized within the transmission-frequency band may have a level much higher than the level of the out-of-band parasitic effects. It is then possible to produce the filter 22 with constraints which are lower than those necessary with the circuit of the state of the art, while guaranteeing a lower level of out-of-band interferences.
Numerous variants of the invention are possible. The example described represents a four-stage device. It goes without saying that the addition or the removal of one or more stages is possible.
The frequency excursion of the third stage can be carried out directly in the fourth stage in order to reduce the number of components of the transmitting path.
It is also possible to perform the frequency excursion partially in the coding circuit according to a known technique. The modulating signals R(s) and I(s) are then representative of a digital modulation instead of being representative of a symbol. In this case, it is possible to use a dual-frequency oscillator or two oscillators switched over in place of the oscillator of the third stage.
The invention is particularly suitable for the digital modulations using wide bands, for example of CDMA type or of multi-carrier type. The modulating signals R(s) and I(s) are then representative of a modulation sum at various frequencies.
However, it should be noted that the spectrum should be inverted on itself; that is not possible with the diagram of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01/03345 | Mar 2001 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/02078 | 2/27/2002 | WO | 00 | 9/8/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/071635 | 9/12/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5509028 | Marque-Pucheu | Apr 1996 | A |
5796838 | Heerman | Aug 1998 | A |
6118984 | Yu-Hong | Sep 2000 | A |
6434401 | Recouly | Aug 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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895363 | Feb 1999 | EP |
1162740 | Dec 2001 | JP |
0145286 | Jun 2001 | WO |
0171929 | Sep 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040090364 A1 | May 2004 | US |