The invention relates to an uplink power control system and more particularly to an uplink power control system employing fade estimation, on-board processing and feedback signaling, and autonomous transmit power adjustment per carrier frequency at terminals.
A number of existing uplink power control systems for satellite communication systems employ open loop power control and therefore provide no feedback to terminals or stations in the communication system regarding power levels of signals received at a satellite following transmission from the terminals or stations. Other uplink power control systems such as those described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,619,525 and 6,097,752 employ closed loop power control; however, the satellites are repeaters and do not generate feedback data based on received signals from terminals. In other words, these systems are bent-pipe systems whereby the satellite does not impart intelligence to the power control loops (e.g., a loop between a terminal and a satellite repeater and loop between a ground station and a satellite repeater) employed by the closed loop power system.
Existing systems do not allow stations or terminals to estimate fade sufficiently to allow for transmit power adjustment that achieves the signal quality (e.g., as measured by packet loss rates) desired when rendering broadband, multimedia satellite services such as Fixed Satellite Services (FSS) operating in the 30/20 GHz Ka-band spectrum. Ka-band transmission is affected greatly by environmental conditions such as rain, cloud cover, scintillation and interference. Accordingly, a need exists for an uplink power control system that can maintain a desired level of signal quality at the satellite in view of atmospheric fading and variation attributable to Ka-band transmission, external interference and transmission delay.
The above described disadvantages are overcome and a number of advantages are realized by an uplink power control (ULPC) system that employs an ULPC algorithm at each terminal to adjust the transmit power per carrier frequency for that terminal and therefore autonomously with respect to other terminals.
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention, the ULPC algorithm of the present invention receives feedback information generated on-board the satellite. The satellite is operable to perform a number of noise and signal-to-noise measurements and signal-to-noise and interference measurements using received uplink signals from terminals and to generate a status packet having information for each terminal relating to its recent uplink signal transmission on a particular channel. The ULPC algorithm uses the status packet when determining transmit power for its corresponding terminal when transmitting on that particular channel.
In accordance with yet another aspect of the present invention, ULPC system of the present invention employs an essentially constant power beacon signal generated by the satellite and cell cast periodically to terminals. The ULPC algorithm at each terminal derives carrier-to-noise data relating to the beacon signal that is used to estimate the downlink fade and facilitate adjustment of terminal transmit power.
In accordance with still yet another aspect of the present invention, the ULPC algorithm maintains and updates filter tables using feedback data generated by the satellite. The tables relate to system variations such as the terminal temperature variation and satellite gain-to-temperature variation, estimated uplink spectrum shape and fade estimation and are used to select terminal transmit power.
The various aspects, advantages and novel features of the present invention will be more readily comprehended from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the appended drawings, in which:
Throughout the drawing figures, like reference numerals will be understood to refer to like parts and components.
1. System Overview
An illustrative broadband multimedia satellite system 10 constructed in accordance with the present invention is depicted in
The system 10 supports different data rates and different types of connections. Data rates that can be supported on a single carrier can be, for example, 16.384 Mbps (8E1), 2.048 Mbps (E1) and 512 kbps (E1/4). Lower rates are used when STs enter a fallback mode described below. Different connection services include, but are not limited to, connectionless and connection-oriented calls. For a connection-oriented call, an ST 40 communicates with a network operations control center (NOCC) 28 to receive tokens with which to request uplink bandwidth from the payload. In this connection mode, the NOCC 28 can determine if sufficient bandwidth is available to meet terminal requests for rate or volume traffic. For a connectionless call, an ST 40 communicates with the satellite payload 21 directly without first obtaining authorization from the NOCC 28. The ST first sends a contention channel request to the payload 21 for uplink bandwidth. The payload, in turn, sends an assignment to the terminal, as well as a power measurement, to allow the ST to adjust uplink power. Regardless of the connection mode used, the payload 21 receives packet segments from the STs 40 via uplink signals, validates signatures provided therein, schedules packets for downlink transmission and then transmits them.
2. Uplink Power Control
Ka band transmission is affected greatly by the environment. The major factors are the rain, cloud, scintillation and interference. The present invention provides the system 10 with an uplink power control (ULPC) system 50 which is specifically designed to compensate for the transmission environment.
The major portions of the ULPC system 50 are distributed between the satellite 20 and the ST 40. The NOCC 28 plays a lesser role. Each ST adjusts its uplink (U/L) transmit power per carrier frequency based on beacon power measurements and satellite feedback (e.g., power measurement of U/L packets). The satellite 20 is, therefore, responsible for maintaining a stable beacon signal over time, and for performing power measurements on U/L packets from the STs.
The interaction among the various ULPC subsystems is shown in
The uplink power control (ULPC) algorithm preferably operates as shown in
The inputs to the ULPC algorithm 52 include a ULPC status packet received from the satellite 20, a beacon signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) measurement derived from the beacon signal received from the satellite, a power setting request generated by the satellite terminal software, and the channel (frequency), frame number, and slot number associated with the impending transmission. Likewise, the outputs of the algorithm 52 comprise the selected transmit (TX) power, a request (when needed) for a foreground calibration channel, and a fallback mode indicator.
Inputs and outputs generated and used within the ULPC algorithm 52 comprise a channel number to index FTF and beacon C/N to indicate CNTF used to compute the transmit (TX) power, a clear sky threshold (e.g., average beacon SNR), and the frame number and slot number associated with the impending transmission. These internal inputs and outputs, together with the feedback from the satellite and the beacon signal-to-noise (SNR) measurement, are used to update the ULPC filter indicated generally at 62 and table buffer 64 in accordance with the present invention.
A top-level state diagram of the ULPC algorithm 52 is shown in
With reference to event 78 in
For each U/L transmission, the satellite 20 receives an U/L burst from an ST, makes a series of power measurements, and reports the results of these measurements via cellcast to each ST. These measurements comprise a noise measurement per carrier using the noise estimation period in each U/L frame, a signal-to-noise ratio measurement for each U/L packet received, a block decode metric from which the ST can derive the signal-to-noise-interference ratio (Ec/(No+Io)) using a pre-defined table lookup, and an implicit Reed-Solomon (RS) decoding pass or fail indicator. The NOCC 28 plays a lesser role in the ULPC process. It, however, facilitates the ULPC process by downloading various ULPC parameters to any ST within an U/L cell, configuring the satellite demodulator subbands so as to evenly spread out the contention channels as much as possible, and configuring the satellite PCC so that the ULPC status packets are given the highest priority drop.
The following signal models are preferably used for the ULPC: system 50 of the present invention. First, the ST receives (in dB):
1. Signal Power:
Psig=GST+C0+Cv−FDL,
Where C0 is the beacon nominal power, Cv is the beacon power variation, FDL is the D/L fade and GST is the ST receiver gain.
2. Noise power:
Ns=Fn+GST+N0,
where Fn is the noise floor change caused by the fade and N0 is the nominal receiver noise floor.
3. Beacon C/N:
C/N=C0/N0+Cv−FDL−Fn.
The ST transmit EIRP (in dB):
PST=PUL+|HST(ƒc)|,
where HST(ƒc) is the ST TX spectrum, ƒc is the U/L carrier frequency and PUL is the ULPC setting power.
The satellite receives (in dB):
PSAT=GRX(ƒc)+PST−FUL+N+ΣIl,
=GRX(ƒc)+HST(ƒc)+PUL−FUL+N+ΣIl
=H(ƒc)+PUL−FUL+N+ΣIl
is defined as the U/L chain system spectrum. H(f) is unknown and time varying to the ST.
Thermal noise and channel interference contaminate the signal received at the satellite. The satellite preferably continuously monitors signal quality and informs the STs. Each ST adjusts its transmission power such that the expected signal quality is achieved at the satellite. The transmission of U/L power control status packets is preferably accomplished in cellcast mode. The signal quality in the satellite is reported as:
1. Uplink Noise Power (N);
2. Uplink Signal-to-noise-ratio ((C/N)SAT); and
3, Uplink Bit Error Rate Metric. (Ec/(No+Io)).
The SNR indicates the signal quality in the presence of additive thermal noise only. The BER is a known function of Ec/(No+Io). Thus, the BER Metric indicates signal quality in the presence of the thermal noise and channel interference.
As shown in
The payload 21 preferably makes 24, 2 Mbps noise measurements per demodulator 134. The noise measurement is performed after a channelizer filter (sqrt-Nyquist filter with 40% excess BW). The payload 21 power control module 54 preferably comprises a noise and signal estimator modules (e.g., software components for the PCC).
The noise estimator module uses an absolute value operation to estimate the noise standard deviation: For a N(0,σn), complex noise sample is:
n(k)=nI(k)+j·nQ(k)
The noise standard deviation can be measured by:
where N is the number of noise samples.
For FDMA carriers operating in the 128 or 512 kbps mode, the uplink noise sample corresponds to the uplink noise over the 2 Mbps FDMA carrier bandwidth that overlaps the FDMA carrier or carriers being acknowledged. For FDMA carriers operating in the 2 Mbps mode, the noise sample corresponds to the uplink noise sampled over the bandwidth of the FDMA carrier being acknowledged. For FDMA carriers operating in the 16 Mbps mode, the noise sample subfield corresponds to the uplink noise samples collected over the bandwidth of the eight 2 Mbps FDMA carriers contained within the 16 Mbps FDMA carrier being acknowledged.
The signal estimator module cross-correlates the received UW 150 with a stored version of the UW. The magnitude of this cross-correlation is proportional to the incoming signal's amplitude (not power). Let x(i) the stored UW (i=1 to N, N is the UW length). The complex received signal is given by:
r(i)=Ax(i)eJφ+n(i)
where A is the signal amplitude, φ is the phase, and n(i) is the uncorrelated noise samples. The cross-correlation is given by:
An estimate of the signal amplitude is given by taking the absolute value of R(0). This is a biased estimator, but the bias is small if the SNR is large. For example, the bias is approximately 0.02 dB of Ec/No with N=52 symbol UW at the SNR=17 dB. The SNR can be calculated based on the estimated noise variance and the signal amplitude. The SNR estimate is the signal amplitude estimate divided by the noise estimate. The satellite reports back the SNR measurement to STs in a ULPC status packet.
At the satellite, the received C/N is
where
satellite received C/N and
The U/L fade and the D/L beacon C/N profile is shown in
Based on the satellite feedback and beacon
the ULPC algorithm 52 preferably derives following metrics to control its U/L power:
for all carrier frequencies at any time such that the received C/N at the satellite is
The C/N table PC/N reflects the long-term statistics between D/L C/N and U/L fade. The frequency table Pƒ equalizes the U/L chain spectrum shape (fixed) and Ps tracks system variation. Since the ULPC PCE is greater in poor weather conditions, the C/N target
can be raised to achieve required PLR.
A closed-loop ULPC algorithm 52 based on satellite feedback and beacon C/N is shown in
The STF tracks the system variation (dH(ƒ)). The STF is shared by all frequency bins and all beacon C/N bins. It is updated any time when there is a feedback received. The STF output Ps(+) is updated as:
Ps(+)=Ps(−)+Δs·D . . . RS pass
=Ps(−)−RS—M arg in . . . RS fail
where
The FTF is used to estimate the U/L spectrum shape (H(f)). The U/L spectrum is divided into M frequency bins. There are M low pass filters (LPF) in a FTF for M frequency bins. The spectrum shape is estimated only when in clear sky, or
where
is the averaged beacon C/N,
is the beacon reference C/N and Th is the threshold (0.25 dB). When beacon C/N is within reference region, the FTF is updated for each frequency bin i associated with the feedback:
Pƒ(i,+)=Pƒ(i,−)+Δƒ·Ps(+)
where
Both STF and CNTF use same error metric D as input, there is a possible DC component build-up caused by numerical error. DC component is estimated as:
DC(+)=βs·DC(−)+(1−βs)·Ps(+)
where βs is a filter parameter (0.999).
If the DC component is large enough, i.e.
|DC(+)|>Th—DC,
DC component is removed from STF and CNTF output:
Ps(+)=Ps(+)−DC(+),
Ps(−)=Ps(+)
PC/N(j,+)=PC/N(j,+)−DC(+),
for all C/N bin j
PC/N(j,−)=PC/N(j,+)
DC(+)=DC(−)=0
The beacon C/N is divided into N C/N bins. There are N low pass filters (LPFs) in a CNTF for N beacon C/N bins. For each beacon C/N bin j, the CNTF is updated as:
PC/N(j,+)=PC/N(j,−)−ΔC/N·D
where
The U/L fade estimation at beacon C/N of
is:
{tilde over (P)}C/N(j)=PC/N(j,+)+dPC/N(j).
For an U/L transmission, the U/L power is the function of time (slot number k), frequency (frequency bin i) and beacon C/N (beacon bin j). The U/L power is set as:
PUL(i,j,k)={tilde over (P)}C/N(j)−Ps(+)−Pƒ(i,+)
=PC/N(j,+)+dPC/N(j)−Ps(+)−Pƒ(i,+)
Power Control Error (PCE) is defined at the satellite 20 as:
A ULPC algorithm is preferably implemented for all traffic channels. After a ULPC status packet is received and it is considered as valid, the ULPC algorithm preferably performs identically for all traffic channels. The traffic channels and their interaction with the ULPC algorithm are shown in Table 1.
The U/L power control is based on the D/L beacon measurement and satellite feedback packets. The closed-loop follows same procedures for all contention or traffic channels. Therefore the closed-loop control is identical to all channels.
When there is a transmission at time k, the U/L power PUL(i,j,k) is set according to STF, FTF and CNTF output. A frequency bin is preferably shared by one 2 Mbps carrier or four 512 Kbps carriers. A 16 Mbps channel uses eight frequency bins within its bandwidth. On the other hand, CNTF table is built based on the 512 Kpbs channel. In order to achieve about same C/N target at the satellite, a margin needs to be added to the U/L power. As the result, the U/L power is set as:
if data rate is 16 Mbps
else
PUL(i,j,k)=PC/N(j,−)+dPC/N(j)−Ps(+)−Pƒ(i,+)+Mode_offset+Var_margin(j)
where i is the frequency bin for current transmission (i is the first bin of eight for a 16 Mbps transmission), j is the current beacon bin
and Mode_offset is a power offset for different date rate traffic as shown in Table 2. Higher data rate traffic requires a wider receiver bandwidth at the satellite, hence receives higher noise power. In order to achieve same received C/N at the satellite, a power offset is added to the ST transmission power.
When the ULPC algorithm 52 receives the ULPC status packet, it updates the STF, FTF and CNTF if RS is passed (blocks 172 and 174); otherwise, a fixed power margin is added to the STF to increase the U/L power for next few transmissions (block 176). The calibration message referred to in block 168 and the BoD grant referred to in block 164 preferably arrive within selected timeout periods.
An example of the operation of the ULPC algorithm in the ST is shown in Table 3. This table illustrates how the ST operates for different traffic types on each frame and how the various filters in the closed loop get updated.
1FTF is updated only for clear sky. For this example assume that clear sky is present if the C/N bin is greater than or equal to 10.
In order to track the system variation (e.g., ST temperature variation and satellite G/T variation), foreground calibrations are sent by each ST through the contention channel if there is no transmission for a long time. The foreground calibration is triggered by the ULPC algorithm 52 preferably if, and only if, there is no transmission for a selected period of time (e.g., 10 minutes).
Fallback (FB) mode is used to increase the availability provided to certain satellite commmunication system 10 customers by reducing the ST uplink data rate during times of heavy rain. The reduced data rates are preferably
The ULPC algorithm requests a switch to enter into and exit from the fallback (FB) mode based the ULPC status packet. In order to reduce FB mode false detection rate, the received
and
are filtered first:
where μSNR and μSINR are filter constant for N
and
respectively.
The Normal mode to FB mode switch preferably depends only on the satellite feedback
and not on the beacon C/N.
plays an important role in determining when to switch to the FB Mode since it is desirable to maintain the PLR during the rainy fade condition. Thus, when
drops from Ec/(No+Io) nominal to a Ec/(No+lo) threshold, the normal mode is switched to the fallback mode. When in the normal mode, the ULPC algorithm 52 sends a FB request if:
When the ST operates in the FB rate mode, it is likely that the feedback Ec/(No+Io) is saturated as shown in
is higher than the (C/N)SAT ceiling ((C/N)SAT nominal+6 dB for a 2 Mbps channel). When in FB mode, the ULPC sends a FB Mode Off request if:
Although the present invention has been described with reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the details thereof. Various modifications and substitutions will occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. All such substitutions are intended to be embraced within the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4422171 | Wortley et al. | Dec 1983 | A |
5708966 | Al-Dhahir et al. | Jan 1998 | A |
6085067 | Gallagher et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6101385 | Monte et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6212360 | Fleming, III et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6240124 | Wiedeman et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
6272325 | Wiedeman et al. | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6321065 | Wilcoxson et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6334047 | Andersson et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6430418 | Nivens et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 238 776 | Nov 2001 | CA |
0 837 569 | Oct 1997 | EP |
0 969 607 | Jun 1999 | EP |
WO 9809387 | May 1998 | WO |
WO 9921291 | Apr 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030040274 A1 | Feb 2003 | US |