SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR TIME-OF-FLIGHT DETERMINATION USING CATEGORIZATION OF BOTH CODE AND PHASE IN RECEIVED SIGNAL
20230161051 · 2023-05-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01S19/393
PHYSICS
G01S19/37
PHYSICS
International classification
G01S19/37
PHYSICS
G01S19/39
PHYSICS
Abstract
A method for detecting a probe signal at an estimated code delay and an estimated doppler frequency includes: (i) dividing a period of the probe signal into sections each of a predetermined duration; (ii) assigning to each section one of a multiple code categories, each code category being indicative of a signal pattern of the probe signal within the section; and (iii) selecting multiple phase categories for a sinusoidal signal, each phase category being indicative of a range of phases in the sinusoidal signal. Thereafter, the method includes (i) receiving a signal from which the probe signal is to be detected; (ii) dividing the received signal into sections each of the predetermined duration; (iii) assigning each section of the received signal both a corresponding code category and a corresponding phase category, based respectively on the estimated code delay and the doppler frequency; and (iv) separately accumulating sections of the received signal according to the assigned code and phase categories of each section.
Claims
1. A method for detecting a probe signal at an estimated code delay and an estimated doppler frequency, comprising: (i) dividing a period of the probe signal into sections each of a predetermined duration; (ii) assigning to each section one of a plurality of code categories, each code category being indicative of a signal pattern of the probe signal within the section; (iii) selecting a plurality of phase categories for a sinusoidal signal, each phase category being indicative of a range of phases in the sinusoidal signal; (iv) receiving a signal from which the probe signal is to be detected; (v) dividing the received signal into sections each of the predetermined duration; (v) assigning each section of the received signal both a corresponding code category and a corresponding phase category, based respectively on the estimated code delay and the doppler frequency; and (vi) separately accumulating sections of the received signal according to the assigned code and phase categories of each section.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the predetermined duration is up to one chip.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein each section of the received signal comprises a plurality of samples.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein each sample includes an in-phase component and a quadrature component.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the probe signal has modulated thereon repeated cycles of a pseudorandom code.
6. An integrated circuit for detecting a probe signal in a received signal, comprising: a memory circuit for storing one or more sections of the received signal, each section having a pre-determined duration; a plurality of processing circuits, each including one or more individually addressable accumulators; and a dispatch circuit including (i) storage elements for storing a plurality of code categories each being assigned to a corresponding one of consecutive sections of the probe signal, each section of the probe signal having the predetermined duration and each code category being indicative of a signal transition pattern of the probe signal within the corresponding section; and (ii) a code counter circuit which maps each section of the received signal to a corresponding one of the code categories in the storage elements based on an estimated code delay between the probe signal and the received signal; and (iii) a phase counter circuit which maps each section of the received signal to a corresponding one of a plurality of phase categories of a sinusoidal signal based on an estimated doppler frequency between the received signal and the probe signal, wherein the dispatch circuit maps each section of the received signal to one of the addressable accumulators based on the corresponding code category and the corresponding phase category.
7. The integrated circuit of claim 6, further comprising a control circuit which causes the code categories of the probe signal be stored into the storage elements.
8. The integrated circuit of claim 7, wherein the dispatch circuit further comprises a code category generation circuit which determines the code categories in the storage elements based on a pseudorandom code specified by the control circuit.
9. The integrated circuit of claim 8, wherein the dispatch circuit further comprises a gold code generator circuit.
10. The integrated circuit of claim 7, wherein the control circuit comprises a microprocessor or microcontroller.
11. The integrated circuit of claim 10, wherein the microprocessor or microcontroller is integrated into the integrated circuit in a system-on-a-chip manner.
12. The integrated circuit of claim 6, wherein the dispatch circuit includes multiple sets of storage elements, code counter circuits and phase counter circuits for detecting multiple probe signals, multiple estimated code delays and multiple estimated doppler frequencies.
13. The integrated circuit of claim 6, wherein the predetermined duration is up to one chip.
14. The integrated circuit of claim 6, wherein each section of the received signal comprises a plurality of samples.
15. The integrated circuit of claim 14, wherein each sample includes an in-phase component and a quadrature component.
16. The integrated circuit of claim 15, wherein each accumulator separately accumulates the in-phase and quadrature components of each sample separately, the accumulator further comprising vector registers, vector summers and vector accumulation elements for the separate accumulations.
17. The method of claim 6, wherein the probe signal has modulated thereon repeated cycles of a pseudorandom code.
18. In a receiver, a method for detecting an earliest arrival time among one or more components of a digitized complex-valued received signal, the received signal being a periodic PRN code-modulated signal, wherein each component of the received signal arrives at the receiver over one of multiple signal paths, the method comprising: (i) dividing each period of the received signal into sections; (ii) assigning to each section one of a plurality of code categories, each assigned code category corresponding to a signal pattern of the corresponding portion of the periodic PRN code within the section; (iii) selecting an assigned code category corresponding to a signal pattern that includes at least one signal transition in the real portion of PRN code (iv) accumulating sample values of sections corresponding the assigned code category over one or more periods of the PRN code, the real and imaginary parts of the sample values being accumulating separately; (v) detecting the signal transition in the accumulated sample values of the real portion, and detecting a peak value in the accumulated sample values of the imaginary portion that precedes the signal transition in the real portion; and (vi) deeming the peak value's time of arrival to be the detected earliest arrival time.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the received signal corresponds to a probe signal transmitted from a satellite.
20. The method of claim 19, further comprising determining a pseudorange based on the time of arrival.
21. The method of claim 18, wherein the real and imaginary portions correspond, respectively, to sample values of in-phase and quadrature portions of a received signal down-converted at a predetermined intermediate frequency.
Description
BRIEF DISCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0022]
[0023] IF signal 121 is then sampled (e.g., at 32 MHz) in analog-to-digital (ADC) circuit 103 to obtain digitized signal 123, which is then provided to each of channels 104-1, 104-2, . . . , and 104-n for detection in parallel. In many implementations, digitized signal 123 is provided in complex form—i.e., in in-phase (I) and quadrature (Q) representations (e.g., 2 bits in each of the I and Q components). The movement of the satellite relative to the receiver result in a shift f.sub.n in frequency (“doppler frequency”) in received signal 120. In many applications, the doppler frequency is typically determined to be in the ±5 KHz range. Typically, to detect received signal 120, at any given time, channels 104-1, 104-2, . . . , and 104-n each test as hypothesis both an estimated code delay and a doppler shift.
[0024]
[0025] Processor 180 of
[0026] A highly efficient method for calculating the correlation is disclosed in the Related Application, which is incorporated by reference above. The Related Application teaches methods—one of which is illustrated herein in conjunction with
[0027] In the disclosed methods of the Related Application, samples in each section of received signal 604 are accumulated in an accumulator corresponding to the category of the that section. For example, according to the categorization scheme in
[0028] The present invention extends the methods of the Related Application to eliminate the need for a separate step that removes the doppler frequency.
[0029] According to one embodiment of the present invention, received signal 604 of
[0030] According to one embodiment of the present invention, the following method illustrates detection of a probe signal at an estimated code delay and an estimated doppler frequency: [0031] (i) dividing a period of the probe signal into sections of a predetermined duration; [0032] (ii) assigning to each section one of a plurality of code categories, each code category being indicative of a signal pattern of the probe signal within the section; [0033] (iii) selecting a plurality of phase categories for a sinusoidal signal, each phase category being indicative of a range of phases in the sinusoidal signal; [0034] (iv) receiving a signal from which the probe signal is to be detected; [0035] (v) dividing the received signal into sections each of the predetermined duration; [0036] (v) assigning each section of the received signal both a corresponding code category and a corresponding phase category, based respectively on the estimated code delay and the doppler frequency; and [0037] (vi) separately accumulating sections of the received signal according to the assigned code and phase categories of each section.
[0038] Step (vi) may be carried out, for example, by providing an accumulator to each composite category (c,p), where c is a code category and p is a phase category. Such an arrangement takes advantage of parallelism to achieve high performance and efficiency.
[0039] According to one embodiment of the present invention, the methods of the present invention may be carried out in a dedicated digital circuit, such as illustrated by digital circuit 300 of
[0040] In some embodiments CPU 301 may be any general-purpose microprocessor or micro-controller (e.g., of ARM architecture), often available as configurable circuit module that can be directly integrated into a custom “system-on-a-chip” integrated circuit. In some embodiments, CPU 301 may be a custom control circuit capable of performing selected arithmetic and logic functions. According to one embodiment of the present invention, CPU 301 configures and controls the operations of the circuits in digital circuit 300. In some embodiments, processing circuit 304-1, 304-2, . . . and 304-n each include one or more accumulator circuits each suitable for use for accumulating samples in a section of a received signal, as described in further detail below. CPU 301 may allocate, for example, each such accumulator for use at any given time for accumulating sections of the received signal for a specified channel, a specified composite category and a specified pair of estimated code delay and estimated doppler frequency.
[0041] Dispatch circuit 302 is a logic circuit that dispatches each section of the received signal to its assigned accumulator or accumulators for accumulation. As digital circuit 300 may be used to search for probe signals from multiple channels, each section of the received signal may be dispatched to numerous accumulators. Initially, CPU 301 may load into dispatch circuit 302 one or more PRN codes. Dispatch circuit 302 may divide a cycle of PRN code into the desired sections and categorize each section according to the predetermined code categories. Alternately, rather than providing PRN codes to dispatch circuit 302, CPU 301 may provide code category for each section of the PRN code cycle. In some embodiments, dispatch circuit may be provided gold code generators that can be configured to generate the desired PRN codes. Dispatch circuit 302 includes data registers for storing data required for assigning a section of received signal to composite categories of specified probe signals, based on the corresponding pairs of estimated code delay and estimated doppler frequency, and for dispatching the section of received signal to one or more of processing circuits 301-1, 301-2, . . . and 301-n for further processing
[0042]
[0043]
[0044] A mentioned above, in each accumulator, a detected signal (i.e., the estimated code delay and the estimated doppler frequency are close to the actual code delay and the actual doppler frequency) results in the cumulative samples in each accumulator conform to the waveform of the corresponding bit transitions in the PRN code within the section.
[0045] The distance (“pseudorange”) between the receiver and the position at which the received signal from transmitted from the satellite can be measured by the measured code delay times the speed of light c. If the receiver received the received signal at time t, then the satellite must have been transmitted from the satellite at GPS time t−τ, where τ is the actual code delay. The position of the satellite at GPS time t−τ may be accurately estimated from its ephemeris. The position and velocity of a receiver may be solved using measured pseudoranges of—typically—four or more satellites. The calculations involved may be carried out, for example, in processor 180 illustrated in
ρ.sup.k(t,t−τ)=r(t,t−τ)+c(δt.sub.r(t)+δt.sub.s(t−τ))+A.sup.k(t)+ε.sub.ρ.sup.k(t) (1)
where r(t,t−τ) is the actual pseudorange, δt.sub.r(t) and δt.sub.s(t−τ) are the clock biases in the receiver and the satellite, respectively, A.sup.k (t) represents the atmospheric delay compensation factors and ε.sub.ρ.sup.k(t) is a noise term, typically modeled as a Gaussian zero-mean noise. Collectively, the pseudoranges form pseudorange vector ρ(t) and their time derivatives form pseudorange time derivate vector {dot over (ρ)}(t).
[0046] Receiver position and velocity vectors x and v may be modeled as system state variables of a dynamical system that may be solved using pseudorange vector ρ(t) and pseudorange time derivate vector {dot over (ρ)}(t), satellite ephemeris and statistical analysis techniques (e.g., a Kalman filter) known to those skilled in the art. See, e.g., Misra's section 6.2.
[0047] Equation (1) above may be rewritten as:
ρ.sup.k(t,t−τ)=|x.sup.k−x|+c(δt.sub.r(t)+δt.sub.s(t−τ))+A.sup.k(t)+ε.sub.ρ.sup.k(t) (2)
where |x.sup.k−x| is the actual pseudorange—expressed here as the Euclidean distance between satellite position vector x.sup.k and receiver position vector x. The time derivative of equation (2) relates satellite velocity vector v.sup.k with receiver velocity vector v:
{dot over (ρ)}.sup.k(t,t−τ)=|v.sup.k−v|+c({dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t)+{dot over (δ)}t.sub.s(t−τ))+{dot over (A)}.sup.k(t)+{dot over (ε)}.sub.ρ.sup.k(t) (3)
[0048] Thus, for each satellite, the observed doppler frequency—which is linearly related to the time rate of change of the pseudorange—is the sum of relative velocity (v.sup.k−v) along the line-of-sight between the satellite and the receiver, satellite and receiver clock bias rates {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t) and {dot over (δ)}t.sub.s(t−τ), and atmospheric compensation factors rate {dot over (A)}.sup.k(t). Among these doppler components, relative to receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t) and relative line-of-sight velocity |v.sup.k−v|, satellite clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.s(t−τ) and atmospheric compensation factors rate {dot over (A)}.sup.k(t) are typically small, assuming a high quality clock in the satellite and a relatively slow-changing meteorological model. As discussed above, IF signal 121 is the result of mixing the received signal with a fixed frequency signal generated by local oscillator 125 (typically, an TXCO). The stability of oscillator 125 is reflected in receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t). The uncertainty in relative velocity |v.sup.k−v| is dominated by satellite motion; this uncertainty is typically in the order of 100 KHz. The uncertainty in receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t), however, may be considerably larger.
[0049] To reduce frequency search space 502, the prior art requires a high quality TXCO with a known limited drift, which adds additional cost to the receiver. However, this approach may render the receiver prohibitively expensive for may applications, such as IoT applications. Observing that the uncertainty due to the TCXO in the receiver is common to all satellites, a method according to the present invention requires the full extent of frequency search space 502 only during the initial acquisition of the first satellite in a cold start or warm start. Once the first satellite is successfully acquired, the values of receiver clock bias δt.sub.r(t) and receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t), together with their respective variances, as determined during the initial acquisition of the first satellite, are used in all subsequent satellite acquisitions. By this approach, the uncertainties—other than the uncertainties in the relative velocities of the respective satellites—are substantially removed, such that the likely required frequency search space spans only frequency search space 501. This method may be summarized as follows: [0050] (i) initializing receiver position and velocity vectors x and v to best initial estimates, using a system model that includes receiver position and velocity vectors x and v, and receiver clock bias δt.sub.r(t) and receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t) as state variables of the system model; [0051] (ii) acquiring a first satellite using a first frequency search space that spans both uncertainties due to the first satellite's orbit and uncertainties due to receiver clock bias δt.sub.r(t) and receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t); [0052] (iii) setting the internal states corresponding to receiver clock bias δt.sub.r(t) and receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t) to their respective estimates obtained during the acquisition of the first satellite; [0053] (iv) acquiring a second satellite using a second frequency search space that spans substantially only uncertainties due to the second satellite's orbit.
[0054] In some embodiments of the present invention, a Kalman filter implements the system model in which receiver position and velocity vectors x and v, and receiver and satellite clock biases δt.sub.r(t) are system state variables. In some embodiments, satellite clock biases δt.sub.s(t−τ), and atmospheric compensation factors A.sup.k(t) and other factors affecting the measured pseudoranges may be provided as input variables, or separately handled. In the Kalman filter, system state variables x and v, and receiver clock bias δt.sub.r(t) and receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t), and their covariances are predicted from their corresponding current estimates and a noise model. These current estimates of the syste4m variables and their covariances are, in turn, updated using their respective most recent estimates and measurements of pseudoranges and doppler frequencies of the respective satellites. For example, the current estimate of receiver clock bias rate {dot over (δ)}t.sub.r(t) may be updated by a linear function of its most recent estimate and the measured dopplers.
[0055] The above detailed description is provided to illustrate specific embodiments of the present invention and is not intended to be limiting. Numerous variations and modifications within the scope of the present invention are possible. The present invention is set forth in the claims below.