data aided carrier phase and symbol timing synchronizers are implemented at baseband as digital modulators isolating input signal inphase and quadrature component signals fed into inphase and quadrature. laurent transforms that function as data detector to provide odd and even data bit multiplexed output data signal while cross coupling the inphase and quadrature transformed outputs for removing data modulation in error signals to correct phase errors and timing errors in the received signal so as to provide reliable data demodulation of noisy received signals having dynamic carrier phase and symbol timing errors as found in continuous phase modulation communications systems such as Gaussian minimum shift keying communications systems.
|
0. 22. A method of data-aided carrier phase synchronization to obtain a phase adjustment signal based on a received continuous-phase modulated (CPM) signal, the method comprising:
isolating respective in-phase and quadrature components based on samples of said received CPM signal to which said phase adjustment signal has been applied;
filtering said in-phase components using a filter to obtain an odd filter response corresponding to a principal component of said received CPM signal, the principal component being a laurent component;
filtering said quadrature components using the filter to obtain an even filter response corresponding to a principal component of said received CPM signal, the principal component being a laurent component;
multiplying said odd filter response by a sign of said even filter response to obtain an odd error signal;
multiplying said even filter response by a sign of said odd filter response to obtain an even error signal; and
obtaining said phase adjustment signal based on said odd error signal and said even error signal.
0. 21. A method of performing data-aided symbol timing estimation to obtain a symbol timing, the method comprising:
isolating respective in-phase and quadrature components of a received continuous-phase modulated (CPM) signal based on one or more signal samples obtained using said symbol timing;
obtaining an odd timing error estimate using at least a first detector based on the in-phase component, the odd timing error estimate to be based on odd symbols of a symbol sequence modulated onto the received CPM signal, including obtaining a sign of the odd timing error estimate based on a principal component of said received CPM signal obtained from said in-phase component;
obtaining an even timing error estimate using at least a second detector based on the quadrature component, the even timing error estimate to be based on even symbols of said symbol sequence, including obtaining a sign of the even timing error estimate based on a principal component of said received CPM signal obtained from said quadrature component; and
generating said symbol timing based on said odd timing error estimate and said even timing error estimate.
0. 20. A data-aided symbol timing estimator to obtain a symbol timing, comprising:
an in-phase component isolator to isolate an in-phase component of a received continuous-phase modulated (CPM) signal based on one or more received signal samples obtained using said symbol timing;
a quadrature component isolator to isolate a quadrature component of said received CPM signal based on said one or more received signal samples;
an odd timing error detector to receive said in-phase component, the odd timing error detector to obtain an odd timing error estimate based on odd symbols of a symbol sequence modulated onto the received CPM signal, the odd timing error detector to obtain a sign of said odd timing error estimate based on a principal component of said received CPM signal obtained from said in-phase component;
an even timing error detector to receive said quadrature component, the even timing error detector to obtain an even timing error estimate based on even symbols of said symbol sequence, the even timing error detector to obtain a sign of said even timing error estimate based on a principal component of said received CPM signal obtained from said quadrature component; and
a symbol timing generator to generate said symbol timing based on said odd timing error estimate and said even timing error estimate.
0. 23. A receiver for a received continuous-phase modulated (CPM) communication signal, comprising:
a data-aided symbol timing estimator to obtain a symbol timing, the data-aided symbol timing estimater comprising:
an in-phase component isolator to isolate an in-phase component of the received continuous-phase modulator (CPM) signal based on one or more received signal samples obtained using said symbol timing;
a quadrature component isolator to isolate a quadrature component of said received CPM signal based on said one or more received signal samples;
an odd timing error detector to receive said in-phase component, the odd timing error detector to obtain an odd timing error estimate based on odd symbols of a symbol sequence modulated onto the received CPM signal, the odd timing error detector to obtain a sign of said odd timing error estimate based on a principal component of said received CPM signal obtained from said in-phase component;
an even timing error detector to receive said quadrature component, the even timing error detector to obtain an even timing error estimate based on even symbols of said symbol sequence, the even timing error detector to obtain a sign of said even timing error estimate based on a principal component of said received CPM signal obtained from said quadrature component; and
a symbol timing generator to generate said symbol timing based on said odd timing error estimate and said even timing error estimate;
one or more laurent matched filters to obtain one or more components of said received CPM signal; and
a maximum-likelihood demodulator coupled to receive samples of said one or more components of said received CPM signal, said maximum-likelihood demodulator to obtain data modulated onto said received CPM signal.
1. A symbol timing synchronizer for generating a timing signal from a sampled input signal being a received input signal sampled at a rate of the timing signal, the received input signal being a continuous phase modulated signal modulated by a symbol sequence generated from a precoded data sequence of an input data sequence, sampled input signal having a sampled inphase component and a sampled quadrature component, the symbol timing synchronizer comprising,
an inphase isolator and a quadrature isolator for respectively isolating the sampled inphase component and sampled quadrature component of the sampled input signal for respectively providing an inphase signal and a quadrature signal,
an inphase serial data demodulator and a quadrature serial data demodulator for respectively receiving and filtering the inphase signal and the quadrature signal for generating an odd filter response and an even filter response, and for converting and sampling the odd and even filter responses into odd data and even data, the odd data and the even data alternately forming an estimate of the input data sequence,
an inphase error magnitude generator and a quadrature error magnitude generator for receiving and filtering the inphase signal and the quadrature signal, for respectively generating and sampling an inphase error magnitude signal and quadrature error magnitude signal for respectively generating a sampled inphase error magnitude signal and a sampled quadrature error magnitude signal,
an inphase mixer and a quadrature mixer for respectively mixing the sampled inphase error magnitude signal with the odd data into an odd error signal, and mixing the quadrature error magnitude signal with the even data for generating an even error signal, the odd data representing an odd signal of the inphase magnitude error signal, the even data representing an even sign of the quadrature magnitude signal, and
an oscillator means for generating the timing signal from the even error signal and the odd error signal, the timing signal for controlling the sampling of the inphase serial data demodulator and the quadrature serial data demodulator and for controlling the sampling of inphase error magnitude generator and a quadrature error magnitude generator for generating the timing signal at a rate of the symbol sequence.
12. A symbol timing synchronizer for generating a timing signal from a sampled input signal being a received input signal sampled at a rate of the timing signal, the received input signal being a continuous phase modulated signal modulated by a symbol sequence generated from a precoded data sequence of an input data sequence, sampled input signal having a sampled inphase component and a sampled quadrature component, the symbol timing synchronizer comprising,
an inphase isolator and a quadrature isolator for respectively isolating the sampled inphase component and sampled quadrature component of the sampled input signal for respectively providing an inphase signal and a quadrature signal,
an inphase early-late gate and a quadrature early-late gate for respectively filtering the inphase signal and the quadrature signal for generating an inphase gate signal and a quadrature gate signal, the inphase and quadrature early-late gates respectively serving to cross correlate the inphase and quadrature signals with gate functions in synchronism with the timing signal,
an inphase transformer and a quadrature transformer for respectively transforming the inphase signal and the quadrature signal for generating an inphase transformed signal and a quadrature transformed signal,
an inphase gate sampler and a quadrature gate sampler for respectively sampling inphase gate signal and the quadrature gate signal for generating a sampled inphase gate signal and a sampled quadrature gate signal,
an inphase transformer sampler and a quadrature transformer sampler for respectively sampling the inphase transformed signal and the quadrature transformed signal for generating a sampled inphase transformed signal and a sampled quadrature transformed signal,
an inphase hard-limiter and a quadrature hard limiter for respectively converting the sampled inphase transformed signal into odd data and the sampled quadrature transformed signal into even data,
an inphase mixer and a quadrature mixer for respectively mixing the sampled inphase gate signal and odd data into an odd error signal and mixing the sampled quadrature gate signal and even data signal into an even error signal, and
an oscillator means for generating the timing signal from the even error signal and the odd error signal, the oscillator means for controlling the sampling of the inphase and quadrature gate samplers and the inphase and quadrature transformer samplers for generating the timing signal at a rate of the symbol sequence.
2. The symbol timing synchronizer of
a loop filter for receiving the odd error signal and the even error signal for providing a filter error signal,
a controlled oscillator for receiving the filter error signal for generating the timing signal, and
a modulo counter for providing an odd timing signal for sampling the inphase magnitude error signal, and for providing an even timing signal for sampling the quadrature magnitude error signal.
3. The symbol timing synchronizer of
the inphase magnitude error generator generates the inphase magnitude error signal from a difference between a filter response of the inphase signal and an odd modulo count of the timing signal, the inphase magnitude error generator serving to cross correlate a principal laurent component of the inphase signal with a gate function relative to the odd modulate count of the timing signal, and
the quadrature magnitude error generator generates the quadrature magnitude error signal from a difference between a filter response of the quadrature signal and an even modulo count of the timing signal, the quadrature magnitude error generator serving to cross correlate a principal laurent component of the inphase signal with a gate function relative to the even modulo count of the timing signal.
4. The symbol timing synchronizer for
inphase and quadrature serial demodulators respectively filter principal laurent components of the inphase and quadrature signals for providing odd and even laurent filter responses, and
inphase and quadrature serial demodulators respectively sample the odd and even laurent filter responses for generating the odd and even data.
5. The symbol timing synchronizer of
an input sampler for sampling the received signal into the sampled input signal sampled at a rate of the timing signals.
6. The symbol timing synchronizer of
a multiplexer for multiplexing the odd and even data into the estimate of the input data sequence.
7. The symbol timing synchronizer of
the received input system is a Gaussian minimum shift keying signal have a bit bandwidth product of ⅕ and a modulation index of ½.
8. The symbol timing synchronizer of
the odd modulator count is (2k+1)N where N is the modulo count of the modulo counter, and
the even modulo count is (2k)N where N is the modulo count of the modulo counter, where k is a symbol index.
9. The symbol timing synchronizer of
the odd error signal is an e2k+1 odd error signal, and
the even error signal is an e2k even error signal, where k is a symbol index.
10. The symbol timing synchronizer of
a carrier phase synchronizer for generating a phase adjustment signal from a sampled phase adjusted input signal and the timing signal,
an input mixer for adjusting the received input signal into a phase adjusted input signal, and
an input sampler for sampling the phase adjusted input signal into the sampled phase adjusted input signal.
11. The symbol timing synchronizer of
an inphase isolator and a quadrature isolator for respectively isolating the sampled inphase component and sampled quadrature component for providing an inphase signal and a quadrature signal,
an inphase serial data demodulator and a quadrature serial data demodulator for respectively receiving and filtering the inphase signal and the quadrature signal for generating an odd filter response and an even filter response, and for converting and sampling the odd and even filter responses into odd data and even data, the odd data and the even data alternately forming an estimate of the input data sequence,
an odd mixer and an even mixer for respectively mixing the even filter response and the odd data signal into an odd error signal and mixing the odd filter response signal and the even data signal into an even error signal, and
an oscillator means for converting the odd and even error signals into the phase adjustment signal.
13. The symbol timing synchronizer of
a loop filter for receiving the odd error signal and the even error signal for providing a filter error signal,
a controlled oscillator for receiving the filter error signal for generating the timing signal, and
a modulo counter for providing an odd timing signal for sampling the inphase magnitude error signal, and for providing an even timing signal for sampling the quadrature magnitude error signal.
14. The symbol timing synchronizer of
the inphase and quadrature early-late gates function as cross correlators for cross correlating a filter response isolating principal laurent components of the inphase and quadrature signals with a gating function,
the inphase gate signal is an inphase magnitude error signal from the correlation of an inphase early-late gate filter response of the inphase signal and the gating function that is in synchronism with an odd modulo count of the timing signal, and
the quadrature gate signal is a quadrature magnitude error signal from the correlation of a quadrature early-late gate filter response of the quadrature signal and the gating function that is in synchronism an even modulo count of the timing signal.
15. The symbol timing synchronizer for
the inphase and quadrature transformers, transformer samplers and hard-limiters respectively are inphase and quadrature serial demodulators,
the inphase and quadrature transformer are principal laurent component filters providing the inphase and quadrature transformed signals that respectively are odd and even laurent filter responses, and
the odd and even data alternately forming an estimate of the input data sequence.
16. The symbol timing synchronizer of
an input sampler for sampling the received signal into the sampled input signal sampled at a rate of the timing signal, and
a multiplexer for multiplexing the odd and even data into the estimate of the input data sequence.
17. The symbol timing synchronizer of
the received input system is a Gaussian minimum shift keying signal have a bit bandwidth product of ⅕ and a modulation index of ½,
the odd modulo count is (2k+1)N where N is the modulo count of the modulo counter,
the even modulo count is (2k)N where N is the modulo count of the modulo counter,
the odd error signal is an e2k+1 odd error signal, and
the even error signal is an e2k even error signal, where k is a symbol index.
18. The symbol timing synchronizer of
a carrier phase synchronizer for generating a phase adjustment signal from a sampled phase adjusted input signal and the timing signal,
an input mixer for adjusting the received input signal into a phase adjusted input signal, and
an input sampler for sampling the phase adjusted input signal into the sampled phase adjusted input signal.
19. The symbol timing synchronizer of
a carrier inphase isolator and a carrier quadrature isolator for respectively isolating the carrier sampled inphase component and carrier sampled quadrature component for providing a carrier inphase signal and a carrier quadrature signal,
an inphase sampler and a quadrature sampler for respectively sampling at the rate of the timing signal the carrier inphase signal and the carrier quadrature signal for providing a carrier sampled inphase signal and a carrier sampled quadrature signal,
a carrier inphase transformer and a carrier quadrature transformer for respectively transforming the carrier sampled inphase signal and carrier sampled quadrature signal into a carrier inphase transformed signal and a carrier quadrature-transformed signal,
a carrier inphase hard limiter and a carrier quadrature hard limiter for respectively converting the carrier inphase transformed signal and carrier quadrature transformed signal into a carrier odd hard limited signal and a carrier even hard limiter signal,
a carrier modulo counter for receiving the timing signal and generating a carrier odd timing signal and a carrier even timing signal,
a carrier odd sampler and a carrier even sampler for respectively sampling at the rate of the carrier odd and even timing signals for sampling the carrier odd and even hard limited signals into carrier odd data and carrier even data,
a carrier odd mixer and a carrier even mixer for respecting mixing the carrier quadrature transformed signal and the carrier odd data signal into a carrier odd error signal and the carrier inphase transformed signal and the carrier even data signal into a carrier even error signal, and
a carrier oscillator for converting the carrier odd and even error signals into the phase adjustment signal.
0. 24. The method of
|
The invention was made with Government support under contract No. F04701-93-C-0094 by the Department of the Air Force. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
The present application is related to applicant's copending application entitled Data Aided Carrier Phase Timing Tracking System for Precoded Continuous Phase Modulated Signals, Ser. No. 09/694,650, filed Oct. 24, 2000, by the same inventors.
The invention relates to the field of continuous phase modulation communications systems. More particularly, the present invention relates to symbol time tracking for continues phase modulations communications systems, such as Gaussian minimum shift keying communications systems having small bandwidth time products.
In synchronous digital data communication systems, the carrier phase and symbol timing of the received signal must be acquired and tracked by the receiver in order to respectively demodulate the received signal and to recover the transmitted data from the received signal. Typically, receivers require carrier phase tracking for signal demodulation and symbol time tracking for data detection for generating received data streams.
Continuous phase modulation (CPM) provides a class of digital phase modulation signals that have a constant envelope. The spectral occupancy of a CPM signal can be controlled or tailored to the available bandwidth of a transmission channel. The constant envelope CPM signals allow saturated power amplifier operation for maximum power efficiency. The use of CPM signals in communications systems can potentially achieve significant improvement in both power and spectral efficiency over other conventional modulation techniques, at the cost of a moderate increase in receiver complexity. Bit error rate reduction has been achieved using trellis CPM demodulation with ideal synchronization. There is a continuing need to develop hardware implementation of the symbol time and carrier phase synchronizers that provides required tracking functions for the coherent CPM receiver. Often, symbol time tracking and carrier phase tracking limit the performance of CPM systems.
A particular type of CPM system is a Gaussian minimum shift keying (GMSK) system where a data sequence is precoded and the precoded data symbols are used for continuous phase modulation. The GMSK received signals are filtered using Laurent filters and samplers for providing data samples subjected to trellis demodulation for generating an estimate of the data sequence. Carrier phase tracking loops are used for demodulating the received signal by tracking the carrier phase, and symbol time tracking loops are used for synchronized sampling of Laurent matched filter signals for generating the data samples that used to generate estimates of the transmitted bit stream using trellis demodulation. These carrier phase and symbol time tracking loops are often referred to as synchronizer. These synchronizers often lose track during noisy communications.
A binary continuous phase modulation signal can be described by complex envelop equations.
The term Zb(t) is called the complex envelope of the CPM signal, fc is the carrier frequency, Eb is the bit energy, T is the bit duration, and N is the transmitted data length in bits, α=(α0α1 . . . αN−1,)αi∈{±1}, represents one of 2N equally probable data sequences. The parameter h is the modulation index, f(t) is the pulse response of the smoothing filter in the CPM modulator, and g(t) is the CPM phase response defined in terms of the f(t) pulse response.
The pulse response f(t) is limited to the time interval [0,LT] for some integer L and having the properties that f(t)=f(LT−t) and g(LT)=1. The pulse amplitude modulation (PAM) representation of signal CPM envelope is well known. Laurent has shown that the complex envelope zb(t) can be expressed as a double summation.
In this PAM representation of the baseband CPM signal envelope, also referred to as the Laurent decomposition, the ak,n values are known as pseudo data symbols and are related to the modulated data symbols generally by a pseudo data symbol equation.
In the pseudo data symbol equation, for all k, 0≦k≦2L−1, βk,0=0 and βn is 0 or 1 digit in the binary expansion of
These pseudo data symbols take on values in the set {±1,±j} when the modulation index h equals ½. In general, the first two pseudo data symbols, a0h and a1,n can be written in an expanded form.
The set of pulse functions {bk(t)}, termed Laurent pulse functions, have a real value and are finite in duration, and are formed by an hk(t) equation.
Among these hk(t) pulses, most of the signal energy is carried by the principal Laurent pulse h0(t), which has a duration of L+1 bit times. Another property of the principal Laurent pulse h0(t) is that it is symmetrical about t=(L+1) T/2. The principal Laurent function h0(t) output provides a gross estimate of the transmitted symbol sequence. These properties of the principal Laurent pulse function h0(t) have not yet been exploited in developing the error signals for the symbol time and carrier phase tracking loops. These and other disadvantages are solved or reduced using the invention.
An object of the invention is to provide data aided symbol timing tracking in continuous phase modulation communication systems.
Another object of the invention is to provide data aided symbol timing tracking in a Gaussian minimum shift keying communications systems.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide data aided carrier phase tracking in continuous phase modulation communication systems.
Still another object of the invention is to provide data aided carrier phase tracking in a Gaussian minimum shift keying communications systems.
Still another object of the invention is to provide data aided carrier phase synchronizers and symbol time synchronizers in Gaussian minimum shift keying communications systems using principal Laurent responses for generating carrier phase and symbol time errors.
The present invention is directed to data aided synchronization in digital carrier phase and symbol timing synchronizers applicable to precoded continuous phase modulation (CPM) signal formats, such as in Gaussian minimum shift keying (GMSK) communications systems having, for example, a modulation index of ½ with a bandwidth time product (BT) of ⅕. The imbedded synchronizers enable simple implementations for data demodulation for CPM signals, such as GMSK signals with small BT values. Data aided tracking is applied in one form to symbol time tracking, and in another form, to carrier phase tracking. An advantage of the proposed data aided symbol timing synchronizer is the combination of both symbol timing tracking and data demodulation functions into an integrated process obviating the need for a separate data demodulator in the receiver. For example, for GMSK signals with BT values of ⅓ and larger, the data demodulation performance in the symbol timing synchronizer can provide optimum performance. An advantage of the data aided carrier phase synchronizer is the combination of both carrier phase tracking and data demodulation functions into one integrated process obviating a need for separate data demodulator in the receiver. For example, for GMSK signals with BT values of ⅓ and larger, the data demodulated performance provided by the carrier phase synchronizer can also be optimum.
In the first form, the symbol time tracking synchronizer includes a data aided symbol timing error discriminator that extracts the timing error of the received CPM signal from the principal Laurent amplitude modulation component by an early and late gating operation followed by a multiplication of the data decision to remove the data modulation in the error signal. This symbol timing error signal is then tracked by a second order digital loop operating at the symbol rate. In the second form, the carrier phase tracking synchronizer includes a data aided phase error discriminator that extracts the phase error of the received CPM signal from the principal Laurent amplitude modulation component by a cross correlation operation with the data decision produced by a serial data demodulator. This error signal is then tracked by a second order digital loop also operating at the symbol rate.
These digital synchronizers are use to track the symbol timing or carrier phase of a continuous phase modulation signal received in the presence of noise with the receiver operating in a data demodulation mode. These synchronizers have a nondegraded bit error rate (BER) performance with reduced design complexity. The GMSK signal with a BT=⅕ can be used as a typical partial response CPM signal. The hardware implementation of such a GMSK receiver with both synchronizers can be modeled for providing simulated BER performance. With data precoding of the original data bit stream prior to transmission of the CPM signal, the synchronizers can function as serial demodulators that achieve absolute phase data detection. The data preceding and data aided synchronization approach for detecting symbol timing and carrier phase error is central to providing accurate symbol time and carrier phase tracking in the synchronizers with reduced design complexity. These and other advantages will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment.
An embodiment of the invention is described with reference to the figures using reference designations as shown in the figures. Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The carrier phase synchronizer 60 receives the tn timing signal that may originate from the symbol time synchronizer 10 in the preferred form, or from a convention symbol timing tracking loop, now shown. The rne−jθ sample input signal 61 is communicated to an inphase component isolator 74 and a quadrature component isolator 76. The inphase component output of isolator 74 and the quadrature component output of isolator 76 are respectively sampled by an inphase sampler 80 and a quadrature sampler 82 at the rate of the tn symbol timing signal 13 that also drives a modulo N counter 84 providing 2kN even and (2k+1)N odd timing sampling signals. The inphase sampler 80 provides a sampled inphase signal to an inphase transformer 86 as the quadrature sampler 82 provides a sampled quadrature signal to a quadrature transformer 88, providing respectively inphase and quadrature transformed signals to hard limiters 90a and 90b, and by cross coupling, to mixers 92b and 92a. The hard limiters 90a and 90b respectively provide inphase and quadrature hard limited signals to hard limiter samplers 94a and 94b that respectively sample at rates of the 2kN even and (2k+1)N odd timing sampling signals from the modulo N counter 84. The hard limiter samplers 94a and 94b respectively provide odd and even data signals that are fed into a data multiplexers 94 for generating the {circumflex over (d)}n data estimate 15. The odd data and even data are respectively mixed with the quadrature and inphase transformed signals from the transformer 88 and 86, respectively, by the mixer 92a and 92b, for generating e2k+1 odd and −e2k even timing error signals. The −e2k timing error signal is inverted by inverter 96 for generating an e2k even timing signal. The e2k even and e2k+1 odd timing error signals are alternately processed and combined by the loop filter 97 to form the e−jθ phase adjustment signal 59. The e2k even and e2k+1 odd timing error signals drive a loop filter 97 that in turn controls a VCO 98 that generates the e−jθ phase adjustment signal 59. As may now be apparent, the carrier phase synchronizer 60 is part of a loop between the e−j0 phase adjustment signal 59 and the rne−jθ input sampled signal 61 with the loop extending through the isolators 74 and 76, samplers 80 and 82, transformers 86 and 88, hard limiters 90a and 90b, samplers 94a and 94b, mixers 92a and 92b, loop filter 97 and VCO 98 for providing the e−jθ phase adjustment signal 59, while concurrently generating the {circumflex over (d)}n data estimate 15.
Referring to all the Figures, the Laurent phase function is shown in
The carrier phase synchronizer 60 uses the Laurent transformers 86 and 88 for isolating the energy of the principal Laurent pulse component for generating the magnitude of the carrier phase error. The carrier phase synchronizer 60 also uses cross coupled principal Laurent pulse energy for indicating the sign of the carrier phase error.
The symbol time synchronization data demodulator includes the symbol time synchronizer 10 for generating the tn timing signal 13 as well as the {circumflex over (d)}n data estimates 15. The carrier phase synchronizer 60 receives the tn symbol timing signal 13 for sampling the real and imaginary isolated components as well as for generating the odd and even data of the {circumflex over (d)}n data estimate 15. Hence, both of the synchronizers 10 and 60 operate as serial data demodulators for generating the {circumflex over (d)}n data estimates 15. Both of the symbol timing and carrier phase serial demodulators of synchronizers 10 and 60 operate respective modulo N counters 55 and 84 at the rate of N counts per symbol period of T seconds clocked at the rate of the tn symbol timing signal 13. The complex envelope Zb(t) of the CPM input signal 11 is sampled at a uniform rate of N samples per symbol period. These rn samples are simultaneously applied to the Laurent transformers 46a, 46b, 86, and 88 that function as data detection filters.
In the symbol timing synchronizer 10, the early-late gates 44a and 44b function as impulse response filters. At each symbol decision instant of t=KN sample counts, for odd values of K, i.e., K=2k+1, the timing error between the receiver tn timing signal 13 and the timing of the received signal is formed by respectively multiplying the output of the early-late gate 44a the algebraic sign of the respective data decision filter, that is, the transformer 46a and hard limiters 50a. For even values of K, i.e., K=2k, the even timing error detector 34 operates similar to the odd time error detector 32. The algebraic sign of the data detection filter outputs, that is, the output of the hard limiters 50a and 50b, is a data decision on the received data symbol for precoded binary CPM received signals. The timing error formed by the detectors 32 and 34 is then filtered by the loop filter 53, integrated by the VCO 54, and quantized into sample counts by the modulo N counter 55 to produce an adjustment to the sampling timing at symbol epoch i.e., at time instants of a multiple of N counts. The symbol timing signal 13 as well as the sampling signals are delayed or advanced by the timing adjustment according to whether the adjustment is positive or negative. No more than N most recent signal samples need to be stored by the synchronizer to allow for the advancing of the sampling timing at the symbol time in the tracking mode.
During data demodulation, the transmitted data symbol can be obtained by differentially decoding two successively received pseudo data symbols a0,n. For a CPM modulation index of h=0.5, the data stream is precoded into a data stream dk fed into the data modulator having an input symbol stream αk with αk=(−1)kdk−1dk. The pseudo data symbol a0,n becomes a0,n=J(n)dn with J(n)=1 for n being odd and J(n)=j for n being even. Thus, with data precoding, either a conventional trellis demodulator or a serial demodulator of the synchronizers 10 and 60 can be used to demodulate the received CPM signal without differential decoding. A CPM modem using precoding can achieve a performance improvement from 0.5 dB to nearly 2.0 dB over a modem without precoding.
Because the Laurent pulse function h0(t) is the dominant pulse function in a CPM signal, the symbol timing error of the received signal relative to the receiver clock can be detected by using the early-late gating on the received baseband signal in conjunction with serial data demodulation of the synchronizers 10 and 60. The timing error is produced by respectively multiplying the data decisions generated by the serial demodulation of the transformers 46a and 46b and the hard limiters 50a and 50b with the output of the early-late gate 44a and 44b. Respective multiplication by mixers 52a and 52b of the early-late gate output with hard limited data decisions is needed to eliminate the data modulation so that a consistent timing error can be formed. With ideal elimination of the data modulation, the detected timing error is given by a detection equation.
The early-late gate function G(t) provides an ideal timing error detection curve Ds(τ) for a given CPM signal, such as a BT=⅕ GMSK signal.
Carrier phase error detection is formulated based on a unit amplitude CPM signal received in the absence of channel noise with a carrier phase offset θ. The phase offset complex signal envelope is defined by an r(t,θ) equation.
When the r(t,θ) signal is applied to the transformed and hard limited serial demodulator, the demodulator output at time t=mT is defined by an rm equation.
With the data dk being equally probable, the averaged value of dmakn is zero for all integers m, when k≠0, and also for all integers m≠n when k=0. Thus, with the carrier phase error θ being small and when the serial demodulators can correctly demodulate the m-th transmitted bit dm, then, by multiplying the serial demodulated bit by the complex conjugate of J(m)dm and taking the imaginary part of the product obtains a random variant whose mean value is Dφ(θ)=R0,0(0)sin(θ)=R0,0(0)θ. The randomness is due to the intersymbol interference, which is data pattern dependent.
Because both timing and carrier phase error detection use serial demodulation to provide the required data decision for error generation, the transformed and hard limited serial demodulator, such as in the synchronizers 10 and 60, can be used for both the tracking error generation and data detection. The error signals produced at every receiver symbol time are applied to the respective loop filter 53 and 97 and voltage control oscillator 54 and 98 to adjust the sampling timing instants or the carrier phase to the received signal. Data reliability of a trellis demodulator is usually better than that of a serial demodulator such as the synchronizers 10 and 60, particularly when the signal memory span L is large. However, if L is small or if an equalizer is used in cascade with the principal Laurent pulse filter, the simple serial receiver can perform particularly as well as the more complex trellis demodulator for the purpose of tracking error generation. Thus, an equivalent variation of the synchronizers 10 and 60 is to feedback the data decisions from the trellis demodulator to the error detectors, provided that the processing delay of the trellis demodulator is properly compensated for and that tracking performance is not unduly compromised by the delay.
The mean error output or discriminator characteristics of the symbol timing error and carrier phase error detectors is shown for the BT=⅕ GMSK signal, in FIG. 5 and
Both the symbol time synchronizer 10 and carrier phase synchronizer 60 have a linear continuous time model that can be implemented digitally for use in performance simulations of the GMSK receiver. The linear model is appropriate because the tracking error is typically small when the receiver is in a tracking mode. The loop filter, used in each synchronizer 10 and 60, is of a proportional and integral type with a transfer function in the form of F(s)=α+β/s and the VCO transfer function in the form of Kv/s where Kv is the VCO gain. The closed loop transfer function of the synchronizers 10 and 60 is defined by an H(s) equation.
In the H(s) equation, the term ζ is the damping factor and ωn is the natural frequency of the synchronizers 10 and 60. These parameters are related to the loop filter and gain parameters by α=2ζωn/KDKv and β=ωn2/KDKv, where KD is the slope of the error discriminator curves shown in
The symbol time synchronizer 10 and carrier phase synchronizer 60 are characterized as providing error signals generated from quadrature Laurent pulse response components of a receiving signal modulated by symbols generated from a precoded data sequence. In the preferred form, the principal Laurent components indicates the original digital bit sequence of the precoded bit stream. The precoding functions to precondition the transmitted symbol sequence so that the principal Laurent function indicates the original data bit stream that is alternately disposed on the I and Q channels of the transmitted CPM signal.
The precoded PCM signal allows the use of the principal Laurent pulse response for extracting the sign of the symbol timing error or carrier phase error that is also the data of the original data uncoded sequence. In the symbol time synchronizer 10, the early-late gates 44a and 44b will extract the magnitude of the symbol timing error. The early-late gates 44a and 44b are sampled at the current symbol tn timing signal 13. As the timing of the received signal 11, varies from the current timing of the timing signal 13, the early-late gates 44a and 44b provide an indication of the magnitude of the current timing error. The CPM signal will carry the data information in one symbol time in the inphase component signal and in the next symbol instance in the quadrature component signal, as the data bit information content alternates between the inphase and quadrature components. The timing synchronization 10 in combination with data preceding enable efficient synchronization timing and data extraction at the expense of requiring the use of both 1 & Q component signals that might otherwise be used to communicate two independent data streams. The loop filter 53 functions to smooth the timing error signal generated by the detectors 32 and 34. The smoothed timing error from the loop filter 53 then drives the VCO that in turn provides the smoothly varying tn timing clock signal. The precoded data provides the sign of the timing error, and hence, the symbol timing synchronizer 10 is data aided, and hence also provides an estimater 15 of the original data sequence.
In the carrier phase synchronizer receives the tn timing signal and the received signal rn and operates on the phase error 0 generated from the r(t,0) equation that describes the phase error. The carrier phase synchronizer 60 also uses the isolated I & Q principal Laurent components and determines the sign of the phase error. But, rather than determining a magnitude of the phase error using early-late gates, the carrier phase synchronizer drifts the phase error depending on the sine of the phase error having a sign that is also the original uncoded data sequence. The § term represents the carrier phase error that is generated using cross-coupling of the Laurent components generating the e2k and e2k+1 error signals with the sign of θ indicating the direction of the phase error drift.
The symbol timing synchronizer 10 and the carrier phase synchronizer 60 offer an efficient mechanism for generating timing and phase error signal while also providing an indication of the uncoded data sequence however requiring data precoding having symbol modulated on both I and Q channels. Those skilled in the art can make enhancements, improvements, and modifications to the invention, and these enhancements, improvements, and modifications may nonetheless fall within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
4336500, | Jul 14 1980 | Motorola, Inc. | MSK Demodulator frequency acquistion apparatus and method |
4355214, | Jun 22 1979 | Compagnie Industrielle des Telecommunications Cit-Alcatel | Adaptive echo canceller for full-duplex transmission of data |
5089822, | Feb 13 1990 | AVION SYSTEMS, INC , | Interrogation signal processor for air traffic control communications |
5623485, | Feb 21 1995 | THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, AS COLLATERAL AGENT | Dual mode code division multiple access communication system and method |
5963586, | Sep 09 1994 | Intel Corporation | Method and apparatus for parallel noncoherent correlation of a spread spectrum signal |
6009317, | Jan 17 1997 | BlackBerry Limited | Method and apparatus for compensating for imbalances between quadrature signals |
6127884, | May 24 1999 | Philips Electronics North America Corp. | Differentiate and multiply based timing recovery in a quadrature demodulator |
6151367, | Jun 30 1997 | Hyundai Electronics Ind. Co., Ltd. | Digital demodulator |
6208201, | Feb 28 1998 | MK SYSTEMS US SUB-HOLDCO INC ; MK SYSTEMS USA INC ; MK SYSTEMS US HOLDCO INC | Recovery of a carrier signal from a modulated input signal |
6219534, | Feb 09 1998 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Radio communication apparatus |
6389082, | Jul 09 1999 | MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO , LTD | Receiver |
6546055, | Jan 12 1998 | BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY, THE | Carrier offset determination for RF signals having a cyclic prefix |
6665356, | Jun 10 1999 | AVAGO TECHNOLOGIES GENERAL IP SINGAPORE PTE LTD | Sample timing control for demodulation of phase-modulated signals |
6693970, | Apr 23 1999 | Nokia Corporation | QAM modulator |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Oct 20 2000 | LUI, GEE L | The Aerospace Corporation | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 024688 | /0720 | |
Oct 20 2000 | TSAI, KUANG | The Aerospace Corporation | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 024688 | /0720 | |
Feb 28 2007 | The Aerospace Corporation | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Aug 28 2012 | M1552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Year, Large Entity. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Aug 31 2013 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Mar 03 2014 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Aug 31 2014 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Aug 31 2016 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Aug 31 2017 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Mar 03 2018 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Aug 31 2018 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Aug 31 2020 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Aug 31 2021 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Mar 03 2022 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Aug 31 2022 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Aug 31 2024 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |