APPARATUS FOR COMPENSATING PHASE ERROR OF CHIRP SIGNAL
20210302568 · 2021-09-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01S13/90
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
The present invention provides an apparatus for compensating a phase error of an RF band chirp signal by pre-distorting a base band chirp signal, including: a waveform generator to output the base band chirp signal; an RF modulator to output the RF band chirp signal by upconverting the base band chirp signal; an error calculation unit to calculate a phase error over time for a predetermined time by comparing the RF band chirp signal with an ideal chirp signal; a section division unit to divide the predetermined time into a plurality of time sections; a section combination unit to combine neighboring time sections based on the phase error; and a phase distortion unit to distort phase of the base band chirp signal in the combined time sections based on the phase error.
Claims
1. An apparatus for compensating a phase error of an RF band chirp signal by pre-distorting a base band chirp signal, comprising: a waveform generator to output the base band chirp signal; an RF modulator to output the RF band chirp signal by upconverting the base band chirp signal; an error calculator to calculate a phase error over time for a predetermined time by comparing the RF band chirp signal with an ideal chirp signal; a section divider to divide the predetermined time into a plurality of time sections; a section combiner to combine neighboring time sections based on the phase error; and a phase distorter to distort phase of the base band chirp signal in the combined time sections based on the phase error.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the error calculator calculates an average of the phase errors (a section error average) for each of the time sections, and calculates an average of the phase errors for all the plurality of time sections (an entire error average).
3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the section combiner combines the time sections in which the absolute value of the section error average is greater than the absolute value of the entire error average.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the error calculator calculates an average of the phase errors for the combined time sections (a combined section error average).
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the phase distorter shifts the phase of the base band chirp signal based on the combined section error average.
6. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the phase distorter subtracts the combined section error average from the phase of the base band chirp signal.
7. An apparatus for compensating a phase error of an RF band chirp signal by pre-distorting a base band chirp signal, comprising: a waveform generator to output the base band chirp signal; an RF modulator to output the RF band chirp signal by upconverting the base band chirp signal; an error calculator to calculate a phase error over time for a predetermined time by comparing the RF band chirp signal with an ideal chirp signal; a section divider to divide the predetermined time into a plurality of time sections based on a point where the phase error over time is 0; a phase distorter to distort phase of the base band chirp signal in the divided time sections based on the phase error.
8. The apparatus of claim 7, further comprising an analyzer to calculate a second-order polynomial by performing a linear regression analysis on the phase error in the divided time sections.
9. The apparatus of claim 8, wherein the analyzer calculates a linear regression value by solving the second-order polynomial for the divided time sections.
10. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the phase distorter shifts the phase of the base band chirp signal based on the linear regression value.
11. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the phase distorter subtracts the linear regression value from the phase of the base band chirp signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] The above and other aspects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art by describing embodiments thereof in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
[0035] Terms or words used in the present specification and claims should not be construed as limited to their usual or dictionary definition, and they should be interpreted as a meaning and concept consistent with the technical idea of the present invention based on the principle that inventors may appropriately define the concept of terms in order to describe their own invention in the best way.
[0036] Accordingly, the embodiments described in the present specification and the configurations shown in the drawings are only the most preferred embodiments of the present invention, and do not represent all the technical spirit of the present invention, so it should be understood that there may be various examples of equivalent and modification that can replace them at the time of filing the present invention.
[0037] Hereinafter, exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail so that those of ordinary skill in the art can readily implement the present invention with reference to the accompanying drawings.
[0038]
[0039] As shown in
[0040] The waveform generator 110 generates and outputs a base band chirp signal in a direct digital synthesizer (DDS) method.
[0041] Meanwhile, in the SAR 100, the narrower the signal width is, the better the resolution is, but, since there is a technical limitation in transmitting a signal by compressing the same amount of electricity into a short signal, the SAR 100 uses a chirp signal. The chirp signal will be described later in detail.
[0042] The waveform generator 110 stores an algorithm for generating a signal in memory and generates a signal using this algorithm. Here, since the size of the algorithm is relatively smaller than the size of the data of the signal itself, the dependence on the memory is small. Therefore, the volume and weight of the memory are reduced, but power consumption increases because a signal is generated every moment. However, this may be used in a wide variety because it has the advantage of generating a desired signal according to a desired operation method and mission conditions based on an algorithm.
[0043] The waveform generator 110 may generate a signal by using an algorithm such as a chirp rate and a look up table (LUT) of a trigonometric function.
[0044] A user or manufacturer of the waveform generator 110 may determine the chirp rate suitable for the mission condition of the SAR 100.
[0045] Here, the chirp rate is accumulated while circulating through an adder loop to form a linear equation with respect to time to generate a frequency value of the chirp signal. As such, the frequency of the chirp signal generated in the loop generating the frequency of the chirp signal is accumulated while circulating through the adder loop once again to form a quadratic equation with respect to time to generate a phase value of the chirp signal. The chirp signal generated as described above is matched to a cosine LUT to generate I data of the chirp signal, and then matched to a sine LUT to generate Q data. Then, the generated I data and Q data are converted to analog signals through a digital to analog converter (DAC) to generate a chirp signal.
[0046] The RF modulator 120 outputs a radio frequency (RF) band chirp signal by upconverting a base band chirp signal received from the waveform generator 110. Here, the RF band may include, but not limited to, an L-band, C-band, X-band, and Ku-band used for satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR).
[0047] The RF band chirp signal is transmitted to the outside by the antenna 130 and the transmitted signal collides with an observation object 10 and is backscattered. At this time, the SAR 100 estimates the observation object 10 by receiving the backscattered signal and processing the image.
[0048]
[0049] The chirp signal is a signal whose frequency changes over time and is a type of linear frequency modulation (LFM) signal. The chirp signal can be classified into a rising chirp whose frequency increases over time and a descending chirp whose frequency decreases over time, and a chirp signal having a rising chirp and a descending chirp together based on a center frequency is called a bidirectional chirp signal.
[0050] As shown in
[0051]
[0052] In
[0053] Referring to
[0054]
[0055] As shown in
[0056] The error calculator 111 calculates a phase error over time for a predetermined time (e.g., 0 to 12 μs) by comparing an RF band chirp signal with an ideal chirp signal. In this case, the phase error for each time may have a certain range vertically due to signal noise.
[0057] As shown in
[0058] Here, the error calculator 111 calculates an average of the phase errors (hereinafter, a section error average) for each of the plurality of time sections divided in units of 1 μs, and calculates an average of the phase errors for all the plurality of time sections (hereinafter, an entire error average).
[0059] As shown in
[0060] Specifically, the section combiner 113 compares the absolute value of the section error average and the absolute value of the entire error average, determines a time section in which the absolute value of the section error average is greater than the absolute value of the entire error average, and combines neighboring time sections among the determined time sections.
[0061] Table 1 below is a table showing an average of the phase error of the chirp signal with respect to time shown in
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Time Section Average of Error Condition PE 0~12 −1.805 S0 0~1 −4.369 PD1 S1 1~2 −5.571 S2 2~3 −6.067 S3 3~4 −7.284 S4 4~5 −4.888 S5 5~6 −4.106 S6 6~7 −1.200 S7 7~8 7.780 PD2 S8 8~9 7.010 S9 9~10 1.125 S10 10~11 −3.471 PD3 S11 11~12 −3.020
[0062] Table 1 shows the average of the phase error for the entire time sections (PE) and the average of the error for each time section (S0 to S11).
[0063] In Table 1, it can be seen that the absolute value of the section error average is greater than the absolute value of the entire error average in the sections S0 to S5, S7 to S8, and S10 to S11 when comparing the absolute value of the entire error average and the absolute value of the section error average by time section.
[0064] Here, if the absolute value of the section error average is greater than the absolute value of the entire error average, it means that the phase error is relatively large, and if the absolute value of the section error average is less than the absolute value of the entire error average, it means that the phase error is relatively small. That is, the time section in which the absolute value of the section error average is greater than the absolute value of the entire error average has a great effect on the total phase error.
[0065] In addition, since S0 to S5 are neighboring time sections, S7 to S8 are neighboring time sections, and S10 to S11 are neighboring time sections, as shown in
[0066] The error calculator 111 calculates an average of the phase errors for the combined time sections (hereinafter, a combined section error average). In the above-described example, the combined section error averages of S0 to S5, S7 to S8, and S10 to S11 are calculated, respectively.
[0067] The phase distorter 114 respectively distorts the phase of the base band chirp signal in the combined time sections based on the combined section error average. That is, referring to Table 1, pre-distortion (Pre-Distortion1; PD1) is performed in S0 to S5, pre-distortion (Pre-Distortion2; PD2) is performed in S7 to S8, and pre-distortion (Pre-Distortion3; PD3) is performed in S10 to S11. Specifically, the phase distorter 114 shifts the phase of the base band chirp signal by inputting a constant value for shifting the phase center based on the combined section error average received from the error calculator 111. That is, the phase distorter 114 subtracts the combined section error average from the phase of the base band chirp signal.
[0068] Referring to
[0069] As described above, the apparatus for compensating phase error of chirp signal according to the first embodiment of the present invention combines the time sections that have great effect on the entire error average and performs the pre-distortion only on the combined sections (S0 to S5, S7 to S8, and S10 to S11), thereby efficiently compensating the phase error, and reducing the complexity compared to compensating the phase error for the entire time sections.
[0070]
[0071] As shown in
[0072] The error calculator 211 calculates a phase error over time for a predetermined time (e.g., 0 to 12 μs) by comparing an RF band chirp signal with an ideal chirp signal. In this case, the phase error for each time may have a certain range vertically due to signal noise.
[0073] As shown in
[0074] Meanwhile, as described above, since the phase error for each time may have a certain range vertically, it is necessary to specify the phase error for each time.
[0075] The analyzer 213 calculates a second-order polynomial by performing a linear regression analysis on the phase error in the divided time sections, and calculates a linear regression value by solving the second-order polynomial for the divided time sections.
[0076] Specifically, as shown in
[0077] The analyzer 213 calculates the linear regression value for each time by solving y=2.4948×10.sup.−7x.sup.2−0.0018x−3.2187 for the time section of 0 to 6 μs, calculates the linear regression value for each time by solving y=−1.8827e×10.sup.−6x.sup.2+0.0376x−179.6595 for the time section of 6 to 10 μs, and calculates the linear regression value for each time by solving y=7.4654e×10.sup.−6x.sup.2−0.0204x+135.1129 for the time section of 10 to 12 μs. Here, the calculated linear regression value is estimated as a phase error.
[0078] The phase distorter 214 distorts the phase of the base band chirp signal in the divided time sections based on the phase error.
[0079] Specifically, the phase distorter 214 shifts the phase of the base band chirp signal for each divided time section based on the linear regression values received from the analyzer 213. That is, as shown in
[0080] As described above, the apparatus for compensating phase error of chirp signal according to the second embodiment of the present invention divides the entire time sections into time sections having a negative value for phase error and time sections having a positive value for phase error (e.g., 0 to 6 μs, 6 to 10 μs, and 10 to 12 μs), and performs the pre-distortion for each time section, thereby efficiently compensating the phase error, and reducing the complexity compared to compensating the phase error for the entire time sections at once.
[0081] The detailed description above is to discuss embodiments of the present invention. In addition, the description above shows and describes embodiments, and the present invention may be used in various other combinations, modifications, and environments. In other words, changes or modifications are possible within the scope of the concept of the invention disclosed in the present specification, the scope equivalent to the disclosed contents, and/or the scope of the skill or knowledge in the art. The embodiments described above describes conditions for implementing the technical idea of the present invention, and embodiments in another state known in the art in using other inventions like the present invention and various changes required in the specific application and use of the present invention are also possible. Therefore, the above-detailed description of the invention is not intended to limit the present invention to the disclosed embodiments. In addition, the attached claims shall be construed as including other embodiments.