BEAM STEERING USING PASSIVE RADAR
20230120842 · 2023-04-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01S13/88
PHYSICS
G01S13/86
PHYSICS
International classification
G01S13/00
PHYSICS
G01S13/86
PHYSICS
Abstract
The invention provides a method of operating a radio communications system first communication device, the method comprising identifying a position of an object which may comprise at least one second communication device by processing electromagnetic radiation emanating passively from the object; steering at least one of a receive beam and a transmit beam towards the object; and determining whether the object comprises at least one second communication device attempting to establish a radio communication with the first communication device.
Claims
1. A method of operating a radio communications system first communication device, the method comprising: identifying a position of an object which may comprise at least one second communication device by processing electromagnetic radiation emanating passively from the object; steering at least one of a receive beam and a transmit beam towards the object; and determining whether the object comprises at least one second communication device attempting to establish a radio communication with the first communication device.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the electromagnetic radiation is one of radio signals, infrared radiation, and visible light.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the position of the object is determined using passive radar functionality.
4. The method according to claim 3, wherein the passive radar functionality is used to classify detected objects according to a likelihood that the detected objects are a potential second communication device.
5. The method according to any preceding claim, wherein changes in the position of the object are monitored and the first communication device periodically determines whether the object is a second communication device attempting to establish a radio communication with the first communication device.
6. The method according to any preceding claim, wherein the steered beam or steered beams are disabled in response to a predetermined condition.
7. The method according to claim 6, wherein the predetermined condition is one of no second communication device having been identified with a predetermined time period, the second communication device being within an area of coverage of another device communication mode, an interfering object being identified and the second communication device moving into a communication coverage area of a different communication device.
8. The method according to any preceding claim, wherein the second communication device is requested to act as a relay station.
9. A radio communication device comprising: means for determining a location of an object which comprises at least one potential second communication device; means for steering at least one of a receive beam direction and a transmit beam direction towards the location of the object; and means for determining whether the object comprises at least one second communication device attempting to establish a radio communication with the radio communication device.
10. The radio communication device according to claim 9, wherein the radio communication device further comprises means for steering a transmit beam towards the object.
11. A passive radar system comprising a receiver of electromagnetic radiation, a processor for processing received electromagnetic radiation signals in order to determine a position of an object, a data storage for storing data relating to a determined object position, and a communication interface to a mobile communication system in order to provide the mobile communication system with information relating to the determine object position.
12. The method according to claim 2, wherein the position of the object is determined using passive radar functionality.
Description
[0033] Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039] Referring to
[0040] Once the passive radar detects a new relevant object (e.g. a vessel or a plane), the gNB will consider steering a beam towards this object. Relevant objects are objects, that are considered by the passive radar functionality to bear UEs. In this case the base station is informed by the passive radar functionality at least about the direction and in another embodiment additionally about the distance of the detected vessels (or planes), so that the base station can adjust its coverage area over water (or in the air) accordingly by directing a downlink Tx beam and/or an uplink Rx beam towards the indicated direction (at least for a configurable amount of time). If no communications take place over the respective (pair of) beam(s) during said period of time, the base station can choose to remove (or, redirect) this (pair of) beam(s). Communication is than provided in the regular coverage area and in the remaining beams (if any). If the passive radar functionality does not detect any relevant objects within the surveillance area, then there is no need for the base station to adjust its regular coverage by directing beams towards the surveillance area.
[0041] In a further scenario shown in
[0042] The same principle is applicable for airborne vehicles, e.g. for drones or airplanes which establish beams between each other for relaying the communication.
[0043]
[0044]
[0045] The flow charts start with a precondition, step 0, that the passive radar functionality is running and has stored two lists: a first list containing objects identified as relevant and a second list containing objects identified as irrelevant. In this example, it has stored in these lists for each detected object an object identifier, object type, the angle and distance of the object in relation to the position of the passive radar receiver and the speed and direction of movement. The data were derived previously as described in the next steps below. An example of the list of relevant objects is shown in table 1. In a system designed for detecting moving objects, objects which remain stationary for a statistically significant time could be classed as irrelevant, for example.
TABLE-US-00001 Object-ID Object type Distance Horizontal angle Vertical angle Speed Direction of movement 1 Large ship 58 km 12° 0° 25 km/h East 2 Large airplane 89 km 58° 33° 800 km/h North-East ...
[0046] In a scan step, step 1, the passive radar functionality performs a further scan of the electro-magnetic waves. The result of this scan are detected objects with their location in relation to the location of the passive radar functionality.
[0047] In a comparison step, step 2, the objects of the new scan result are compared with the stored data in the list of relevant and the list of irrelevant objects. This is done to distinguish new objects from already stored objects. In case an object has appeared, that is not already stored, this object is considered as “new object” and step 4 is performed or otherwise as “known object” and step 5 is performed.
[0048] In a classification step, step 3, detected new objects are classified according to their likelihood to bear UEs. This is more likely for bigger objects like cruise ships and airliners. A new object is classified as “relevant object”, if it may potentially bear UEs, or otherwise as “irrelevant object”. For this classification additional parameters of the object can be considered, e.g. the size, height above sea level, shape (if allowed by the granularity of the incoming radar signal), moving direction and speed of the object. If any or multiple of the additional parameters are not fulfilling a pre-determined criterion, the object is classified as “irrelevant object” otherwise as “relevant object”. The determination of the relevance may depend on the use case, e.g. whether the beams are intended to be steered towards airplanes or ships or a group of pedestrians. The relevance for ships is for example higher, if the object is at sea level and larger and slower compared to a reference value. In this case it is considered as a cruise ship or possibly a container ship, that will most likely bear UEs, and is distinguishable from smaller and/or faster ships, that bear only a few UEs. Further, the relevance is higher, if the object is approaching the gNB, as this will increase the duration of potential communications. Other criteria may be defined, that will match to a passenger aircraft, e.g. the altitude is larger than 5.000 m above sea level and the speed is above 500 km/h. Of course, both sets of criteria can be used by the same passive radar functionality in order to provide radio beams to ships and airplanes simultaneously, and further sets of criteria can be used for other kinds of UE-bearing objects (e.g. trains, cars) or even people carrying UEs with them. The derived relevance value is compared to a pre-configured reference value and the object is assigned either to the list of relevant objects, if it is above the reverence value, or otherwise to the list of irrelevant objects. A new entry is created in the selected list for the new object and a new object ID is assigned to the new object and stored in the list.
[0049] In an updating step, step 4, the stored data of objects are updated according to the outcome of the latest scan. I.e. the location and movement parameters will be updated, if they have changed. The speed of movement is for example calculated from the last and the current location, or the scan itself delivers the object speed. The updates will be made in both lists, i.e. the list of relevant objects and the list of irrelevant objects.
[0050] In step 5, transmitter instructions are derived. After new scan results were included in the object data lists, the passive radar functionality creates a message for the gNB to be used for beam adjustment: [0051] The location and movement properties (e.g. direction, distance, movement direction, movement speed) of newly detected “relevant objects” are indicated to the gNB including the object ID; and [0052] The remaining objects from the list of “relevant objects” (i.e. the known objects thereof) are evaluated, whether there have been significant changes compared to the latest reported values or the values stored from the last scan. Only data with a significant change (e.g. the offset is above a configurable threshold) will be indicated to the gNB.
[0053] The passive radar functionality will then indicate the selected parameters to the gNB.
[0054] In a beam adjustment step, step 6, the gNB updates already established beams and establishes new beams according to the latest received instructions, i.e. it selects the antenna weights and delays of each antenna element of the adaptive antenna array so that the resulting transmitted signals are directed in the indicated direction which leads to an increased signal level in this direction while the signal level in other directions is mainly reduced (for the downlink Tx beam from gNB point of view). This directional signal attenuation is also valid for the reception of signals by this antenna array (i.e. for the uplink Rx beam from gNB point of view). For the newly established (pair of) beams, the object ID, that causes this beam establishment, is mapped to this beam. For further received changes of any objects, the gNB will consider them for the related beam. Further, a timer is started after a new beam is established. The gNB further checks, whether any of the known objects which are provided with a beam, has entered the area of normal coverage. The related beams will be terminated, and the communication will be taken over by the cell which provides the normal coverage. The gNB even further checks, whether any of the known relevant objects that are provided by the normal coverage area, is likely to leave the normal coverage area. In this case the gNB will establish a new beam towards the related objects, which takes over the communication.
[0055] Step 7 is a beam termination step: The gNB regularly checks whether any communication has taken place via the established beams. Once a timer started in step 7 expires and no communication has taken place, the beam may be terminated.
[0056] The procedure then continues with step 2.
[0057] A further flow chart is shown in
[0058] In step 11, the UE wants to communicate and has failed to find any communication peer (without any help of the passive radar functionality). Therefore, it sends a request for locations of relevant objects to the passive radar functionality.
[0059] After reception of the request, in step 12 the passive radar functionality performs a scan of the surveillance area. It scans for electro-magnetic waves (This is an example, i.e. to scan for other kind of signals (visual light, thermal radiation, ...) instead or in addition to thermal radiation is also suitable). The result are objects with their location in relation to the location of the passive radar functionality.
[0060] In step 13, detected new objects are classified according to their likelihood to bear UEs. This is done similar to the classification described above. The detected objects are stored with the related location properties in the respective list according to their classification. In addition, the calculated “relevance value” is stored, so that it can be used to select the most relevant object.
[0061] After new scan results were included in the object data lists, the passive radar functionality selects in step 14 the most valuable object from the list of relevant objects. In this example, it selects the nearest object that is of container-ship size. Then, it may perform an additional scan of the area about the selected object to derive further properties of this object, e.g. the speed and movement direction. After that, it creates a message that includes the location properties of the selected object and transmits this message to the UE to be used for beam adjustment. The selected object is moved to the list of “already used relevant objects”, so that it is not selected for subsequent requests.
[0062] In step 15 the UE establishes a beam in the indicated direction.
[0063] As shown in step 16, the passive radar functionality regularly performs additional scans of the area about the selected object to derive the current location properties of this object. In case the properties have changed compared to the latest scan, it will transmit an update message with the new properties to the UE.
[0064] The UE tries in step 17 to find a communication peer that is able and willing to relay communication towards a communication network. Therefore, it transmits a request message within the established beam, preferably as a broadcast message. In case that a peer will accept the request, it transmits an accept message to the UE. Then, the UE establishes a connection towards this device. In case that more than one UE will accept the request, the UE will select the best suited peer, e.g. by considering the signal quality, the number of hops (i.e. the number of relaying devices in the path) towards the communication network, the costs or other parameters which will affect the communication service.
[0065] Simultaneously to step 17, the UE will in step 18 continuously refine the beam adjustment according to the received instructions from the passive radar functionality.
[0066] In case that no communication peer within the currently established beam is suitable for the UE, it will at step 19 again request the passive radar functionality for another suitable object. The procedure is re-entering step 12, until a connection is successfully established or until no more relevant objects are left.