Sequence generation
11044032 · 2021-06-22
Assignee
Inventors
- Johan Axnäs (Solna, SE)
- Robert Baldemair (Solna, SE)
- Naga Vishnu Kanth Irukulapati (Gothenburg, SE)
- Andres Reial (Malmö, SE)
- Henrik Sahlin (Mölnlycke, SE)
- Jianfeng Wang (Beijing, CN)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A controller generates a sequence by one of (a) splitting a base sequence into multiple equal-size segments and adding said segments elementwise, and (b) generating several cyclically shifted versions of a base sequence, adding the cyclically shifted versions together, and truncating said cyclically shifted versions.
Claims
1. A method for generating a sequence having length L and limited maximum auto-correlation, the method comprising: at a controller, generating the sequence by one of: (a) splitting a base sequence into multiple equal-size segments of length L and adding said segments elementwise, wherein the base sequence is longer than the generated sequence, and (b) generating several cyclically shifted versions of a base sequence, adding the cyclically shifted versions together, and truncating said added cyclically shifted versions to have length L, wherein the base sequence is longer than the generated sequence; and at a radio transceiver device in a 5G radio communication system, transmitting the generated sequence as a random-access preamble or a part thereof.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein generating the sequence further comprises increasing a length of the base sequence before said splitting.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the length is increased by padding the base sequence in frequency domain or by filtering the base sequence in time domain.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein the length is increased to an integer multiple of the number of segments to split the base sequence into.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the base sequence is a Zadoff-Chu (ZC) sequence, a ZCxM sequence, or a Gold sequence.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the controller is part of the radio transceiver device.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the controller is not comprised in the radio transceiver device.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the sequence is transmitted as part of a preamble transmission on a physical random access control channel (PRACH).
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising repeating the method at least once, to generate a set of sequences, wherein each repetition generates a sequence of length L from a distinct base sequence of length p, wherein the generated sequences have limited maximum cross-correlation if the base sequences have limited maximum cross-correlation, wherein said transmitting at the radio transceiver device comprises transmitting one of the generated sequences.
10. A method implemented in a radio transceiver device, comprising: receiving a sequence transmitted as or in a random-access preamble from a transmitting radio transceiver device; comparing the received sequence with a plurality of sequences generated by the method of claim 9; and on the basis of a result of the comparison, identifying the transmitting radio transceiver device.
11. The method of claim 9, further comprising pruning the set of generated sequences based on a criterion, and wherein the transmitted one of the generated sequences is a sequence remaining after pruning the set of generated sequences.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the criterion is based on a peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) and/or correlation properties.
13. A method implemented in a radio transceiver device, comprising: transmitting a sequence obtained by the method of claim 1 as at least one of synchronization information and identification information.
14. A controller for generating a sequence having length L and limited maximum auto-correlation, the controller comprising processing circuitry, the processing circuitry being configured to cause the controller to: generate the sequence by one of: (a) splitting a base sequence into multiple equal-size segments of length L and adding said segments elementwise, wherein the base sequence is longer than the generated sequence, and (b) generating several cyclically shifted versions of a base sequence, adding the cyclically shifted versions together, and truncating said added cyclically shifted long versions to have length L, wherein the base sequence is longer than the generated sequence; and make the generated sequence available to a radio transceiver device in a 5G radio communication system for transmission as a random-access preamble or part thereof.
15. A non-transitory computer-readable medium comprising, stored thereupon, a computer program for generating a sequence having length L and limited maximum auto-correlation, the computer program comprising computer code which, when run on processing circuitry of a controller, causes the controller to: generate the sequence by one of: (a) splitting a base sequence into multiple equal-size segments of length L and adding said segments elementwise, wherein the base sequence is longer than the generated sequence, and (b) generating several cyclically shifted versions of a base sequence, adding the cyclically shifted versions together, and truncating said added cyclically shifted versions to have length L, wherein the base sequence is longer than the generated sequence; and make the generated sequence available to a radio transceiver device in a 5G radio communication system for transmission as a random-access preamble or part thereof.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The inventive concept is now described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) The inventive concept will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which certain embodiments of the inventive concept are shown. This inventive concept may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided by way of example so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the inventive concept to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout the description. Any step or feature illustrated by dashed lines should be regarded as optional.
(12)
(13) The communications network 100 is only one example where the controller 200 could be used. For example, as will be disclosed below, the controller 200 could be part of a radar equipment.
(14) Sequences with good correlation properties are often used for detection of the presence of a signal and/or for synchronization in time and frequency (i.e. to determine frequency reference difference between transmitter and receiver), for example between the radio transceiver device 250 and the TRP 120 in
(15) Miss-detection (MD) or missed detection: The receiver fails to detect a sequence that was transmitted. Optionally, the case where the receiver declares the correct sequence as detected, but still incorrectly determines a time and/or frequency offset might also count as a miss-detection.
(16) False detection (FD) or false alarm: The receiver declares as detected a sequence that was not transmitted.
(17) The detection performance measures miss-detection (MD) rate (or probability) and false-detection (FD) rate (or probability) could then be defined as the fraction of detections where a miss-detection or a false detection occurs. Both rates should preferably be low for good system performance.
(18) In a given system, the level set for the detection threshold in the receiver is a trade-off between having a low MD rate and having a low FD. The lower the threshold is set, the lower will the MD rate be, and higher will the FD rate be, and vice versa.
(19) However, a low cross-correlation can reduce the risk for FD without affecting the MD rate, and low autocorrelation can reduce the risk for MD without affecting the FD. Hence, low correlations are desirable for good performance.
(20) In a typical radio communication system (e.g. LTE), the very first transmission from a UE after power-on is a preamble transmission on a physical random access control channel (PRACH).
(21) The PRACH preamble is typically just a synchronization sequence, serving the purposes of informing the network about the presence of a new UE that would like to join the network, and allowing the network to estimate the round trip delay between UE and the network TRP.
(22) The estimation is possible since the UE makes its PRACH transmission a certain predefined time interval after hearing a synchronization channel transmission transmitted by the TRP on the downlink (i.e. transmission from TRP to UE). The estimated round trip delay is then used to configure the UE with a timing advance, i.e. the UE should in any subsequent transmissions compensate for the round trip delay by transmitting early, thereby ensuring that transmissions reach the TRP at the desired point in time.
(23) The round trip delay may sometimes be rather large, several times larger than the cyclic prefix (CP) of an OFDM symbol, or even much larger than an entire OFDM symbol. Therefore, for accurate detection with the large delay uncertainty, LTE uses for PRACH a special, very long OFDM symbol, which is based on a discrete Fourier transform (DFT) that is 12 times the size of the normal DFT, and also has a long CP. This solution may work well in LTE, but in 5G radio communication systems, where large antenna arrays might be used, the potential need for implementing a special large DFT for every antenna branch can be undesirable from an implementation point of view. There are also other potential issues, e.g. related to co-existence of different signal numerologies.
(24) WO 2015/144256 and WO 2015/144208 are two example documents where a normal OFDM symbol repeated multiple times is used, without CP in between the repetitions. With this format, each OFDM symbol effectively serves as a long CP to the next OFDM symbol.
(25) The NR PRACH sequences should have good auto-correlation properties for accurate delay estimation. Many sequences with good cross-correlation properties are needed in a cellular system in order to simultaneously (i) ensure that UEs in different nearby cells use different sequences so that a PRACH from a UE in a different cell is not mistakenly detected by a TRP and (ii) ensure that there are many sequences allocated to each cell so that the risk of two UEs using the same sequence to contact the network at the same time is sufficiently low (if each UE randomly selects a sequence from the allocated set, as is customary in radio communication systems such as LTE). For example, as discussed above, typical well-known sequence types such as Zadoff-Chu (ZC) (and also Gold sequences) of length N are limited to approximately N different sequences with good correlation properties (and other types such as m-sequences are limited to only one or a few sequences with good correlation properties). See e.g. [P. Fan and M. Darnell, “Sequence design for communications applications”, 1996] for definitions of ZC sequences, Gold sequences, and m-sequences, also known as maximum-length sequences. There are various tricks used to go beyond this limit in some specific cases, e.g. if the maximum propagation delay in an environment is known to be below T.sub.delay, then for each original sequence, if it has good correlation properties, one can generate a set of sequences that are identical except for cyclic shifts 0, T.sub.delay, 2T.sub.delay, 3T.sub.delay, . . . that can easily be proved to also have good correlation properties (with all shifted and original sequences). However, if the original sequence is short, no or very few different shifts may be possible in typical environments.
(26) An attempt to solve this issue was proposed in [R1-1700034 “RACH preamble design for NR”, Huawei, HiSilicon, 3GPP TSG-RAN WG1 RAN1-NR #1, Spokane, USA, Jan. 16-20, 2017], which describes a method for generating many different sequences with purported good auto- and cross-correlation properties. This was achieved by multiplying (non-shifted) ZC sequences elementwise with different cyclic-shifted versions of an m-sequence. These sequences will hereinafter be denoted “ZCxM sequences”. However, as will be demonstrated, these sequences have correlation properties that are quite far from those of, e.g., Zadoff-Chu sequences.
(27) As explained above, there is a need for a set of many PRACH sequences with good correlation properties. However, the above-described NR PRACH preamble design consists of multiple repetitions of a short sequence instead of a single long one as in LTE, and hence there is a need to be able to generate large sets of short sequences with good correlation properties.
(28) The embodiments disclosed herein particularly relate to mechanisms for generating a sequence. In order to obtain such mechanisms there is provided a controller, a method performed by the controller, a computer program product comprising code, for example in the form of a computer program, that when run on a controller, causes the controller to perform the method.
(29)
(30) At least some of the herein disclosed embodiments are based on enabling generation of many short sequences with good correlation properties by first generating a long base sequence and then split the base sequence into multiple equal-length pieces (segments) that are then added together elementwise to form a single short sequence of length L. The number of possible sequences depends on the length of the long base sequence, while it can be shown that the resulting short sequences can have good correlation properties.
(31) Reference is now made to
(32) S102: The controller 200 generates the sequence by one of (a) splitting a base sequence into multiple equal-size segments and adding said segments elementwise, and (b) generating several cyclically shifted long sequences, and truncating said cyclically shifted long sequences.
(33) Embodiments relating to further details of generating a sequence as performed by the controller will now be disclosed.
(34) Reference is now made to
(35) In some aspects the length of the base sequence is increased. Hence, according to an embodiment the controller 200 is configured to perform step S102a as part of generating the sequence in step S102:
(36) S102a: The controller 200 increases length of the base sequence before the splitting of the base sequence.
(37) There could be different ways to lengthen the base sequence. According to an embodiment the length is increased by padding the base sequence in frequency domain or by filtering the base sequence in time domain. According to an embodiment the length is increased to an integer multiple of the number of segments to split the base sequence into.
(38) According to an embodiment the base sequence is a ZC sequence, a ZCxM sequence, or a Gold sequence. In some embodiments, in the case where the base sequence is a ZC sequence which is split into 2 segments, the resulting sequence will have essentially the same maximum (continuous-time) correlations θ.sub.a and θ.sub.c as a normal ZC sequences of the short length, while the number of sequences is doubled. The peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) is also good.
(39) In one embodiment, the resulting set of sequences is pruned by removing sequences with the worst PAPR until the number of sequences remaining is the same as could have been generated using normal ZC sequences, i.e. L−1. The resulting set of L−1 sequences then has similar correlation properties as the ZC sequences, but substantially better PAPR.
(40) Hence, according to an embodiment the controller 200 is configured to perform step S102b as part of generating the sequence in step S102:
(41) S102b: The controller 200 prunes the sequence before transmission based a criterion.
(42) According to an embodiment the criterion is based on a peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR).
(43) According to some aspects, as in the illustrative example of
(44) S104: The controller 200 (or radio transceiver device 250) transmits a signal comprising the generated sequence.
(45) Hence, a method implemented in the radio transceiver device 250, could comprise a step of transmitting a sequence obtainable by the generating in step S102 as at least one of synchronization information and identification information. According to an embodiment the sequence has been generated by an entity other than comprised in the radio transceiver device 250.
(46) According to an embodiment the sequence is transmitted as at least one of synchronization information and identification information. According to an embodiment the synchronization information relates to synchronization of transmission and/or reception of the radio transceiver device in at least one of time and frequency. According to an embodiment the identification information relates to identification of the radio transceiver device itself. According to an embodiment the identification information relates to identification of other information than identification of the radio transceiver device itself. For example, the identification information could identify a signal the radio transceiver device has received in downlink (where the identification information thus is defined by an index to the signal).
(47) According to an embodiment the sequence is transmitted as part of a preamble transmission on a physical random access control channel, PRACH.
(48) According to an embodiment the controller is part of a radar equipment 260. Then, the sequence generated in step S102 could be used during operation of the radar equipment. Hence, according to an embodiment step S106 is performed:
(49) S106: The controller 200 operates the radar equipment 260 using the generated sequence.
(50) In summary, the sequence generated in step S102 could be used for random access preambles in a wireless network or in radar equipment.
(51) For random access preambles the sequence generated in step S102 could serve the purpose of a preamble sequence sent on NR PRACH or LTE PRACH, serve the purpose of constant amplitude zero autocorrelation (CAZAC) sequences, serve the purpose of of Zadoff-Chu sequences, serve the purpose of random access preambles, as synchronization signals (PSS, SSS; DMRS; SRS). In radar equipment the sequence generated in step S102 could serve the purpose of so-called Generalized Chirp-Like sequences.
(52) Additional aspect and embodiments will now be disclosed.
(53) One way to generate M time-domain sequences of length L with good correlation properties will now be disclosed. These steps are illustrated in
(54) It is noted that D in principle can be any positive integer, and p can in principle be any positive integer fulfilling p≤D.Math.L. The zero-padding can be at the beginning and/or the end of the (frequency-domain) sequence. If p=D.Math.L, the padding step can be omitted, but the method generally gives best performance when p is a prime. A prime is also the best choice for, e.g., a ZC base sequence since it allows for generation of the largest number of ZC sequences in relation to the length.
(55) A method for generating M sequences of length L for the case of using a prime-length Zadoff-Chu sequence as base sequence will be described next. Select a prime p and an integer D so that D.Math.L>p>M holds. Preferably, but not necessarily, D.Math.L≈p≈M. Generate a set of M length-p Zadoff-Chu sequences with the roots 1,2, . . . , M, and then for each sequence perform the following steps: zero-pad the sequence in frequency domain to length D.Math.L (i.e. perform DFT, zero-pad to length D.Math.L, perform IDFT), split the resulting sequence into D segments each of length L, add together elementwise all the segments, and finally normalize the obtained sequence appropriately.
(56) It can be shown that the resulting M sequences have essentially the same autocorrelation θ.sub.a as ZC sequences of length L and that in the case D=2, also the maximum crosscorrelation in continuous time is almost as good as for ZC sequences of length L, see
(57) As it is well known that ZC sequences (in the limit of large sequence length) are right on the theoretical bound for how many sequences that can be generated for given maximum auto- and cross-correlation properties, it may seem like a contradiction that the number of sequences can be increased with negligible increase of the maximum auto- and cross-correlation. However, the theoretical bounds apply to the (non-oversampled) discrete time sequence, and ZC in continuous time (or oversampled time) is not very close to that bound.
(58) At least some of the herein disclosed embodiments will next be described in terms of equations. In all cases, a Zadoff-Chu base sequence is used as an example, but could be replaced by equations/code for any other type of base sequence if desirable.
(59) A base sequence can, in the case of Zadoff-Chu sequence with root u, be generated as
x.sub.u(i)=e.sup.−j2πui(i+1)/p,0≤i≤p−1. (7)
(60) It is also possible to use a different type of base sequence. The length increase (stretching) can be obtained in the following way: First the DFT of the sequence is constructed as
{tilde over (x)}.sub.u(k)=Σ.sub.i=0.sup.p−1x.sub.u(i)e.sup.−j2πik/p,0≤k≤p−1, (8)
(61) where j=√{square root over (−1)} is the imaginary unit. Then the padding and IDFT is obtained as
x.sub.u′(i)=Σ.sub.k=0.sup.p−1{tilde over (x)}.sub.u(k)e.sup.j2πik/(DL),0≤i≤DL−1. (9)
(62) Note that the zero-padding is implicitly achieved by summing only up to p−1 even though the argument in the exponential is normalized by DL.
(63) The splitting and adding can be obtained as
s.sub.u(i)=Σ.sub.d=0.sup.D−1x.sub.u′(L.Math.d+i),0≤i≤L−1. (10)
(64) Finally, an optional normalization can be performed, for example, as
(65)
(66) The final sequence is ŝ.sub.u(i) or s.sub.u(i), depending on whether normalization is needed or not. By selection of the root u, it is possible to generate p−1 distinct ZC sequences x.sub.u of length p. Accordingly, the above process can be repeated to provide up to p−1 sequences s.sub.u(ŝ.sub.u) with the desired correlation properties.
(67) An alternative, but mathematically equivalent, description is to first generate a set of cyclically shifted versions of the base sequence (of length D.Math.L) and adding them together (without prior splitting) before finally truncating them to the right length (i.e. L). In other words, the cutting or splitting takes place after the adding step rather than before. D shifts of length d.Math.L (d=0 . . . D−1) are applied and added. A translation into equations of this alternative generation method will now be provided.
(68) A Zadoff-Chu base sequence with root u is defined by
(69)
(70) Multiple cyclically shifted versions of the base sequence can, using a revised version of the expression in clause 5.7.3 of the technical specification 3GPP TS 36.211 “Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA); Physical channels and modulation”, Release 8 or higher, be added as
(71)
(72) Here, T.sub.m=m.Math.T.sub.seq represents the cyclic shifts, M=┌N.sub.ZC.Math.Δf.sub.RA/B┐ is the number of added versions, B is the transmission bandwidth, and the other parameters are defined in clause 5.7.3 of 3GPP TS 36.211. A possible later generalization may be to use multiple roots u.sub.m.
(73) Alternatively, multiple cyclically shifted versions of the base sequence can be added as
(74)
(75) where t is the (continuous) time, 0≤t<T.sub.SEQ+T.sub.CP, T.sub.d=d.Math.T.sub.SEQ is the cyclic shift, K.sub.RA=1/D, is a subcarrier spacing adjustment factor, and the other parameters are defined in clause 5.7.3 of 3GPP TS 36.211 (though different numerical values may be used).
(76) It could be possible to set D=┌N.sub.ZC.Math.Δf.sub.RA/B┐, where B is the transmission bandwidth. The term ½ added to k.sub.0 is optional, and can probably be removed in NR. Also, one could set T.sub.CP=0. A possible later generalization may be to use multiple roots u.sub.m. The resulting sequences may be referred to as added cyclically shifted Zadoff-Chu sequences.
(77) Further aspects relating to base sequences other than Zadoff-Chu will now be disclosed.
(78) The herein disclosed embodiments for generating the sequence can in principle be applied on any other base sequence type. Not all sequence types may benefit from the herein disclosed methods, but is has been found that there are a number of different base sequence types for which the herein disclosed methods give benefits, e.g. allow increasing the number of sequences without major detection performance degradation. An example of a base sequence type where the method has been successfully applied is a Zadoff-Chu sequence with an m-sequence as a cover code [R1-1700034 “RACH preamble design for NR”, Huawei, HiSilicon, 3GPP TSG-RAN WG1 RAN1-NR #1, Spokane, USA, Jan. 16-20, 2017].
(79) Furthermore, it has been found that for some base sequence can also improve cross-correlation properties and false-detection rate. For example, in
(80) Further aspects relating to sequence set pruning will now be disclosed.
(81) In one embodiment, the resulting set of p−1 sequences is pruned by removing the p−1−L −1 sequences with worst PAPR, so that only L−1 sequences remain, i.e. similar to the number of normal Zadoff-Chu sequences of length L that could have been generated. It then turns out that in the case where K=2 this pruned set significantly outperforms the normal Zadoff-Chu sequences in terms of PAPR, while retaining very similar performance in terms of auto- and cross-correlation, see
(82) It is possible to also prune a smaller or larger part of the sequence set. Further, instead of pruning based on PAPR, the pruning can be made based on a cubic metric.
(83) In another embodiment, the sequence set is pruned by removing sequence with worst auto- and/or cross-correlation properties.
(84) The sequence set can also be pruned based on a combination of PAPR, cubic metric, and/or correlation properties, i.e. a joint criterion, possibly with priority to some criterion (e.g. choosing sequences with best correlation, but in case of two sequences with equal correlation, pick the one with best PAPR).
(85) Pruning based on other criteria is also possible.
(86) Further aspects relating to other ways of increasing the sequence length will now be disclosed.
(87) The increasing of the sequence length (stretching the sequence) can also be performed in other ways than by padding in the frequency domain. For example, filtering in the time domain can be used. For example, the sequence can be transformed to some other domain for padding (e.g. using a cosine transform instead of DFT).
(88) Instead of increasing the length (stretch) of the base sequence before splitting, the base sequence could instead be padded with zeros (or having a part of the sequence repeated) in time domain to obtain a length that is divisible by D. A sequence could also be generated that is too long (DL) and where the sequence then is truncated before splitting. Splitting could be performed in segments of unequal length, where the segments are then padded and/or truncated individually before adding.
(89) Further aspects relating to other adding methods will now be disclosed.
(90) Another variant is to not directly add together the K sequence fragments, but rather to first time-reverse one or more of them. In one embodiment, this may be e.g. likened to “folding” the original sequence segments on top of each other, instead of “slicing and stacking” them. The adding may also use different weight factors for the different sequence segments. The sequence segments may also be subject to different non-integer cyclic shifts (e.g. by DFT, phase rotations, IDFT) before adding.
(91) In one embodiment, the network (such as the TRP) makes available only a sequence subset whose size depends on the number of unique PRACH preambles required.
(92) For example, if there is need only for a small set of sequences, the network may select to use a small set of sequences that have particularly good correlation properties. In particular, the network may choose to use sequences with a low value of K.
(93) Also, even within a set of sequences with similar correlation properties, it could be advantageous to use only a subset. The reason is that the larger the number of sequences that the TRP has to search for is, i.e. the larger the number of hypotheses it has to try, the larger will the false-detection rate be for given miss-detection rate and sequence correlation properties.
(94) In order to communicate the relevant subsets to the UEs in the network, it may be useful to have predefined sequence groups, so that the network only needs to signal (e.g. via a broadcast channel) the sequence group identities/indices.
(95) Aspects relating to coexistence will now be disclosed.
(96) Different sequence families generated according to the herein disclosed embodiments could be mixed to achieve improved performance/capacity trade-offs—in scenarios where a limited number of unique sequences is required, a smaller but better-performing sequence family is allocated, and if more sequences are needed, sequences from a larger sequence family (albeit with worse cross-correlation properties) are added.
(97) It has previously been established that ZC and ZCxM sequences (above) have good inter-family cross-correlation properties, and that the ZC-based and ZCxM-based sequences of the herein disclosed embodiments have cross-correlation properties similar to their respective base sequences. In one embodiment, the initial, smaller sequence set is therefore a size-139, length-72 family generated from length-139 ZC sequences according to the herein disclosed embodiments, and the larger sequence set is a large-size (thousands), length-72 family generated from length-127 ZCxM sequences according to the herein disclosed embodiments.
(98) Alternatively, the initial, smaller sequence set could be sequences according to the herein disclosed embodiments with base sequence ZC, p=139 (or another prime number less than 2.Math.72), L=72, and D=2 (or some other L and D satisfying the constraints of the inventions), and the larger set found as sequences generated by the herein disclosed embodiments with ZCxM base sequences with same p, L, and D as mentioned above.
(99) Further aspects of the embodiments disclosed herein will now be disclosed.
(100) Although description has been provided in terms of generating sequences in the time domain, the herein disclosed embodiments are equally applicable to generate sequences in the frequency domain. The padding in frequency domain is then replaced by zero-padding in time domain (by IDFT, padding, DFT).
(101) The steps of DFT, padding, and IDFT, can in generally be replaced by the steps IDFT, padding, DFT, with the same technical effect.
(102) Since the resulting sequences have good autocorrelation properties, it is possible to in applications where the uncertainty in timing (lack of knowledge by the receiver about start time of received sequence) is small compared to duration of the transmitted sequence, effectively further increase the set of sequences while maintaining good correlation properties. For example, if the timing uncertainty is less than or equal to half the sequence duration, the original (length-L) sequence and the original (length-L) sequence cyclically shifted by half its length (i.e. by L/2) can be used as two different sequences. Thanks to the good autocorrelation properties of the original sequences, these two sequences will have good cross-correlation properties. The principle is similar as already used for PRACH ZC sequences in Section 5.7 of 3GPP TS 36.211, but here instead applied on the new type of sequences. The parameter D could be configurable by the network. It could for example be broadcast in a broadcast channel related to initial access, e.g. PBCH, or (possibly implicitly) signaled in PSS, SSS, or Timing Synchronization Signal. It could be signaled as a separate entity, or be part of or implied by some more general PRACH (or random access) configuration procedure.
(103)
(104) Particularly, the processing circuitry 210 is configured to cause the controller to perform a set of operations, or steps, S102-S106, as disclosed above. For example, the storage medium 230 may store the set of operations, and the processing circuitry 210 may be configured to retrieve the set of operations from the storage medium 230 to cause the controller to perform the set of operations. The set of operations may be provided as a set of executable instructions.
(105) Thus the processing circuitry 210 is thereby arranged to execute methods as herein disclosed. The storage medium 230 may also comprise persistent storage, which, for example, can be any single one or combination of magnetic memory, optical memory, solid state memory or even remotely mounted memory. The controller may further comprise a communications interface 220 at least configured for communications with other entities, nodes, and devices, such as other entities, nodes, and devices of the communications network 100. As such the communications interface 220 may comprise one or more transmitters and receivers, comprising analogue and digital components. The processing circuitry 210 controls the general operation of the controller e.g. by sending data and control signals to the communications interface 220 and the storage medium 230, by receiving data and reports from the communications interface 220, and by retrieving data and instructions from the storage medium 230. Other components, as well as the related functionality, of the controller are omitted in order not to obscure the concepts presented herein.
(106)
(107) The controller 200 may be provided as a standalone device or as a part of at least one further device. For example, as illustrated in
(108) Further, first portion of the instructions performed by the controller may be executed in a first device, and a second portion of the of the instructions performed by the controller may be executed in a second device; the herein disclosed embodiments are not limited to any particular number of devices on which the instructions performed by the controller may be executed. Hence, the methods according to the herein disclosed embodiments are suitable to be performed by a controller residing in a cloud computational environment. Therefore, although a single processing circuitry 210 is illustrated in
(109)
(110) In the example of
(111) The inventive concept has mainly been described above with reference to a few embodiments. However, as is readily appreciated by a person skilled in the art, other embodiments than the ones disclosed above are equally possible within the scope of the inventive concept, as defined by the appended list of enumerated embodiments.
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
(112) 3GPP 3.sup.rd Generation Partnership Project
(113) 5G Fifth Generation
(114) CDF Cumulative density function
(115) DFT Discrete Fourier Transform
(116) FD False detection (false alarm)
(117) FFT Fast Fourier Transform
(118) IDFT Inverse Discrete Fourier Transform
(119) IFFT Inverse Fast Fourier Transform
(120) LTE Long-Term Evolution
(121) MD Miss-detection (missed detection)
(122) MF Matched Filter
(123) OFDM Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing
(124) NR New Radio
(125) PAPR Peak-to-average power ratio
(126) PBCH Physical Broadcast Channel
(127) PRACH Physical random-access channel
(128) PSS Primary Synchronization Signal
(129) SNR Signal to Noise Ratio
(130) SSS Secondary Synchronization Signal
(131) TRP Transmission and Reception Point (e.g. base station, access point, etc.)
(132) UE User Equipment
(133) UL Uplink
(134) ZC Zadoff-Chu (sequence)