Radio cell arrangement in high speed scenario
09848362 · 2017-12-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Joakim Axmon (Kavlinge, SE)
- Peter ALRIKSSON (Horby, SE)
- Christopher Callender (Kinross, GB)
- Maomao Chen (Lund, SE)
- Torgny Palenius (Barseback, SE)
Cpc classification
H04W24/10
ELECTRICITY
H04W36/0009
ELECTRICITY
H04W36/00837
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04W24/10
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Antenna nodes are controlled to maintain a respective radio cell, each cell having one and the same physical cell identity. The antenna nodes are further controlled to maintain the respective radio cell in a single direction substantially along a path such that each wireless communication device, during movement in a movement direction along the path, can connect either to consecutive antenna nodes towards which the wireless communication device is moving or connect to consecutive antenna nodes away from which the wireless communication device is moving.
Claims
1. A method performed by a network node in a network, where the network node is connected to a plurality of antenna nodes that are located along a predefined path where a plurality of wireless communication devices are moving, the method comprising: forming a super-cell along the predefined path by: controlling the antenna nodes to maintain a respective radio cell, each cell having one and the same physical cell identity; and controlling the antenna nodes to maintain the respective radio cell in a single direction substantially along the predefined path such that each wireless communication device, during movement in a movement direction along the predefined path, can connect either to consecutive antenna nodes towards which the wireless communication device is moving or connect to consecutive antenna nodes away from which the wireless communication device is moving.
2. The method of claim 1, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes to maintain one and the same downlink radio frame timing and to maintain one and the same timing offset between downlink and uplink.
3. The method of claim 1, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes to maintain respective downlink radio frame timings that differ between consecutive antenna nodes by a respective timing value that is proportional to a size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes, and to maintain respective timing offsets between downlink and uplink that differ from each other by a respective timing offset value that is proportional to the size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes.
4. The method of claim 1, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes such that a first set of antenna nodes among the plurality of antenna nodes maintains communication with a first set of wireless communication devices among the plurality of wireless communication devices by utilizing a set of radio communication resources, and such that a second set of antenna nodes among the plurality of antenna nodes maintains communication with a second set of wireless communication devices among the plurality of wireless communication devices by utilizing said set of radio communication resources, wherein: all radio cells maintained by the first set of antenna nodes are geographically separated from all radio cells maintained by the second set of antenna nodes.
5. The method of claim 4, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes such that antenna nodes are deleted from and added to the first set of the antenna nodes in dependence of a movement of the first set of wireless communication devices along the predefined path, and such that nodes are deleted from and added to the second set of the antenna nodes in dependence of a movement of the second set of wireless communication devices along the predefined path.
6. The method of claim 5, comprising: determining the movement of any of the first set of wireless communication devices and the second set of wireless communication devices along the predefined path by any of: determining an uplink signal strength associated with consecutive antenna nodes; determining a Doppler shift of uplink signals; obtaining a signal measurement report from at least one wireless communication device; determining an accumulated timing advance (TA) value and a TA update rate associated with at least one wireless communication device; determining an uplink path loss; and obtaining information from an operator of vehicles that carries at least one wireless communication device along the predefined path.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein carrier aggregation is utilized, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node away from which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same primary cell.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein carrier aggregation is utilized, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node away from which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same secondary cell.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein carrier aggregation is utilized, comprising: controlling the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node towards which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same secondary cell.
10. A network node configured to be connected to a plurality of antenna nodes that are located along a predefined path where a plurality of wireless communication devices are moving, the network node comprising input/output circuitry, a processor and a memory, said memory containing instructions executable by said processor whereby said network node is operative to: form a super-cell along the predefined path by: controlling the antenna nodes to maintain a respective radio cell, each cell having one and the same physical cell identity; and controlling the antenna nodes to maintain the respective radio cell in a single direction substantially along the predefined path such that each wireless communication device, during movement in a movement direction along the predefined path, can connect either to consecutive antenna nodes towards which the wireless communication device is moving or connect to consecutive antenna nodes away from which the wireless communication device is moving.
11. The network node of claim 10, operative to: control the antenna nodes to maintain one and the same downlink radio frame timing and to maintain one and the same timing offset between downlink and uplink.
12. The network node of claim 10, operative to: control the antenna nodes to maintain respective downlink radio frame timings that differ between consecutive antenna nodes by a respective timing value that is proportional to a size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes, and to maintain respective timing offsets between downlink and uplink that differ from each other by a respective timing offset value that is proportional to the size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes.
13. The network node of claim 10, operative to: control the antenna nodes such that a first set of antenna nodes among the plurality of antenna nodes maintains communication with a first set of wireless communication devices among the plurality of wireless communication devices by utilizing a set of radio communication resources, and such that a second set of antenna nodes among the plurality of antenna nodes maintains communication with a second set of wireless communication devices among the plurality of wireless communication devices by utilizing said set of radio communication resources, wherein: all radio cells maintained by the first set of antenna nodes are geographically separated from all radio cells maintained by the second set of antenna nodes.
14. The network node of claim 13, operative to: control the antenna nodes such that antenna nodes are deleted from and added to the first set of the antenna nodes in dependence of a movement of the first set of wireless communication devices along the predefined path, and such that nodes are deleted from and added to the second set of the antenna nodes in dependence of a movement of the second set of wireless communication devices along the predefined path.
15. The network node of claim 14, operative to: determine the movement of any of the first set of wireless communication devices and the second set of wireless communication devices along the predefined path by any of: determine an uplink signal strength associated with consecutive antenna nodes; determine a Doppler shift of uplink signals; obtain a signal measurement report from at least one wireless communication device; determine an accumulated timing advance (TA) value and a TA update rate associated with at least one wireless communication device; determine an uplink path loss; and obtain information from an operator of vehicles that carries at least one wireless communication device along the predefined path.
16. The network node of claim 10, where carrier aggregation is utilized, operative to: control the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node away from which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same primary cell.
17. The network node of claim 10, where carrier aggregation is utilized, operative to: control the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node away from which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same secondary cell.
18. The network node of claim 10, where carrier aggregation is utilized, operative to: control the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node towards which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same secondary cell.
19. A nontransitory computer readable storage medium comprising instructions which, when executed on at least one processor in a network node in a network, cause the network node to carry out a method, wherein the network node is connected to a plurality of antenna nodes that are located along a predefined path where a plurality of wireless communication devices are moving, wherein the method comprises: forming a super-cell along the predefined path by: controlling the antenna nodes to maintain a respective radio cell, each cell having one and the same physical cell identity; and controlling the antenna nodes to maintain the respective radio cell in a single direction substantially along the predefined path such that each wireless communication device, during movement in a movement direction along the predefined path, can connect either to consecutive antenna nodes towards which the wireless communication device is moving or connect to consecutive antenna nodes away from which the wireless communication device is moving.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(16) Two main problems arise when the UE is unaware of being handed over between cell towers, and which may lead to radio link failure: Doppler shifts due to passing a cell tower 210, 220 or leaving the coverage of a first tower and entering coverage of a second, where the UE travels away from the first tower and towards the second tower, or vice versa, as illustrated by a handover zone 214 in
(17) In case the UE passes a cell tower that is close to the railway tracks the change of sign for the Doppler shift will be abrupt and come without any telltale sign.
(18)
(19) It is most likely that future high-speed railway tracks using elevated platforms will have a minimum distance between railway tracks and cell tower (antenna node) that is very small in order to avoid having to lease additional sites along the tracks and instead use the existing platform or the land immediately next to it. Hence also for high speed train scenarios with velocities exceeding 500 km/h one can expect antennas to be close to the tracks, therefore causing abrupt shifts in frequency (i.e. Δf.sub.max) in the order of several kHz.
(20) One complication with the abrupt frequency shift is that the capture range for frequency offset estimation is in the order of ±2 kHz when using cell-specific reference signals (see for instance U.S. Pat. No. 8,675,788 “Correction of frequency offsets greater than the Nyquist frequency”). Beyond that range the estimate will be ambiguous which will increase the risk of the UE tuning towards an incorrect target and eventually causing a radio link failure. In a frequency division duplex, FDD, LTE scenario the capture range if using synchronization signals is ±7 kHz (for time division duplex, TDD, same as when using cell-specific reference signals) but the synchronization signals in general comprise fewer resource elements and occur more sparsely than cell-specific reference signals. Hence it is challenging for the UE to quickly detect and retune to large frequency steps; it will result in an impaired radio operation or interruption of duration of multiple radio frames or result in radio link failure.
(21) Turning now to
(22) It is to be noted that, in the present disclosure, generic terms in the form of “network node” and “UE” are used. However, non-limiting examples of network nodes include: antenna node, Node B, enhanced NodeB, e-NodeB, radio network controller, RNC, base station, base station controller, BSC, access point, base transceiver station, BTS, remote radio head, RRH, remote radio unit, RRU, relay, core network node etc. Similarly, UE may be any type of wireless device capable of communicating with a network node and/or with another wireless device over a wireless link. Non-limiting examples of UE are mobile terminal, laptop, USB device, embedded device, machine type communication, MTC, or machine-to-machine, M2M, capable, device-to-device, D2D, capable UE aka proximity service, ProSe, UE etc.
(23) The method is performed by a network node 300 in a network, where the network node 300 is connected to a plurality of antenna nodes 310, 311, 312, 313 that are located along a path 305 where a plurality of wireless communication devices 301, 303 are moving. The method comprises, in an action 401, controlling the antenna nodes 310, 311, 312, 313 to maintain a respective radio cell 320, 321, 322, 323, each cell 320, 321, 322, 323 having one and the same physical cell identity. Further, the antenna nodes are in an action 402 controlled to maintain the respective radio cell 320, 321, 322, 323 in a single direction substantially along the path 305 such that each wireless communication device 301, 303, during movement in a movement direction 302, 304 along the path 305, can connect either to consecutive antenna nodes towards which the wireless communication device 301, 303 is moving or connect to consecutive antenna nodes away from which the wireless communication device 301, 303 is moving.
(24) As mentioned above, in such a method a plurality of cells 320, 321, 322, 323 are maintained and can be considered as a “super-cell”, where all cells within the super-cell share the same physical cell identity and configurations such that the UE 301, 303 can get handed over between the cells seamlessly.
(25) This is further illustrated in
(26) A variation of controlling antenna nodes is illustrated in
(27) The benefit of this arrangement is that the UE 601, 603 will be handed over from a weak cell to a strong cell and hence not requiring new events for handovers at borders of super cells.
(28) The SCell coverage differs from the PCell coverage, hence the network node has to rely on SCell measurements before reconfiguring a SCell unless applying the principles outlined in PCT/EP2014/071423 for SCell preconfiguration and autonomous SCell activation. Another drawback is that the frequency offset will differ considerably between PCC and SCC, and although constant the UE might have to be aware of the possibility for this scenario in order to handle it correctly with respect to AFC.
(29) Returning to
(30) Alternatively, controlling the antenna nodes in action 401, may in some embodiments comprise controlling the antenna nodes 310, 311, 312, 313 to maintain respective downlink radio frame timings that differ between consecutive antenna nodes by a respective timing value that is proportional to a size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes, and to maintain respective timing offsets between downlink and uplink that differ from each other by a respective timing offset value that is proportional to the size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes.
(31) Such embodiments are illustrated with reference to
(32) The cell timing perceived by the UE 701 before changing from one cell to another in the super-cell is depending on the radio propagation time from the current tower at the point where the UE 701 goes into coverage of the next tower. When the UE 701 enters coverage of cell #n 722 it is desirable that the difference in perceived timing for cells #n−1 724 and #n 722 is within the tolerable margin, say 1 μs on downlink (where the exact value may depend on the network node, antenna node or eNodeB implementation).
(33) For cells with a range of up to 300 m it is possible to operate synchronously with the same frame timing at the antenna node (e.g. eNodeB) transmit, Tx, antenna connector since the propagation delay over 300 m is and in worst case in case a 2 μs misalignment will be seen on the UL in case the UE transmits based on the timing in the previous cell.
(34) For cells larger than 300 m, in order for the DL cell timings in the UE 701 to be within the acceptable margin at the handover occasions, it is necessary to operate the cells in a phased manner with respect to frame timing at the antenna node (e.g. eNodeB) Tx antenna connector. Thereby the perceived DL timing of the next cell falls within the acceptable margin, and the UE transmits within the acceptable time window. One example of how this can be achieved is illustrated in
(35) As pointed out for small cells, it is enough to secure that the timing in the new cell falls within the acceptable margin hence the cells can be shifted by a little less than the propagation delay. For instance, as a non-limiting example the DL timing and UL-DL timing offsets between cell #n and cell #0 may be determined from:
Δ.sub.n,0.sup.DL=Σ.sub.k=1.sup.n(τ.sub.k−1,k−δ.sub.k.sup.DL), and
Δ.sub.n,0.sup.UL−DL=Σ.sub.k=1.sup.n(2τ.sub.k−1,k−δ.sub.k.sup.UL),
where τ.sub.k−1,k is the propagation delay between cells #k−1 and #k, and δ.sub.k.sup.DL and δ.sub.k.sup.UL are constants chosen such that τ.sub.k−1,k−δ.sub.k.sup.DL and 2τ.sub.k−1,k−δ.sub.k.sup.UL are within the tolerable margin for downlink and uplink timing, respectively.
(36) Returning to
(37) The radio communication resources may be resource blocks, RB, in a LTE or eLTE scenario.
(38) This is illustrated in
(39) As illustrated in
(40) In other words, a network node controlling the antenna nodes that maintain the cells of a super-cell may divide the antenna nodes/cells into multiple segments with individual resource allocation when geographically separated. For instance, UEs on trailing trains or trains travelling in the opposite direction along a path/track may reuse the same allocations in the super-cell provided that they are in different, non-overlapping segments. In case a second, trailing train overtakes a first train, or a second train meets a first train, all UEs in the concerned segment have to share resources.
(41) As exemplified in
(42) All cells within the segment transmit the same information to each associated UE, thereby allowing a UE to cross the cell boundary at a point in time not precisely known by the network node to continue the communication. Once the UE enters a cell, the network node activates the next cell and transmits identical information in that cell.
(43) Returning to
(44) In other words, a network node may associate a UE with other UEs displaying an identical trail (for example when the UEs are being used on one and the same train that is moving along a path/track), and may associate the group of UEs to a segment which it then manages, rather than tracking each UE separately. The associated UEs may have different level of connected mode activity, but at least some UEs are likely to be in full activity at any given moment of time, allowing the network node to determine whether to have the segment to slide into the next cell (as illustrated in
(45) Means for the network node to determine how the UE is moving may for instance include any or a combination of the following (as indicated above): UE trail; how quickly did it pass previous cells as can be established by analyzing which cell receives the UL Tx the strongest. UL Rx Doppler; analyze the Doppler shift on UL to find UE velocity. Signal measurements; serving cell measurements and/or channel quality reporting allowing the network node to assess the position of the UE. Timing advance; accumulated timing advance and timing advance update rate. Uplink path loss, measured for example using sounding reference symbols.
(46) Alternatively, a network operator that has control over the network node may receive information from a railway operator on the current location of the train (e.g. global positioning system, GPS, coordinates), associate a segment with the train, and associate UEs with the segment and thereby keeping track of which cells need to be active.
(47) Should there be branching along the path/track along which the train/UEs are moving, the network node may for instance prepare neighbour cells for all possible outcomes, and then identify which path/track the group of UEs is following by which it can release resources for cells covering the other paths/tracks. Alternatively, at such branching points a regular (i.e. according to prior art) handover can be carried out by which the UE first identifies the best cell and then gets handed over. Yet another alternative is that the network operator receives information from the railway operator regarding the route the train will take.
(48) Turning now to
(49) The base stations 1006, 1007 and 1008 are further connected to a serving gateway, SGW, 1012, which is handing the user data plane transport to and from the base station to which a UE is connected, and to one or more packet data network gateways, PGW, 1014, which connect UEs to the internet 1016. The MME in whose pool of base stations a UE resides configures which base station the SGW shall connect to for transport of the UE user plane data.
(50) In
(51) Management of a super-cell may be handled by a single network node such as an eNodeB (as indicated in
(52) In case a super-cell is handled by multiple eNodeBs, data forwarding at handover of a UE between eNodeBs would heavily load the X2 interface since all UEs are to be handed over within the same time frame. To avoid excessive load the data packets are in such scenarios preferably routed by a SGW to both source and target eNodeBs.
(53) Returning to
(54) Moreover, one or more than one CoMP techniques such as Coordinated link adaptation, Dynamic point blanking, Coordinated Beamforming (null forming), Dynamic point selection, Joint transmission etc., can be combined with one or more than one of the above described methods. Some of the examples are as follows, although other combinations are not precluded:
(55) One set of super-cells can be used for multiple points under CoMP where the multiple points can be deployed as cells next to each other along the railway (i.e. the path along which a train/UEs are moving). With simultaneous transmission and/or coordinated link adaptation for both DL and UL the system throughput can be improved on both UE and BS sides.
(56) The antenna management as illustrated in
(57) The radio resource management illustrated in
(58) Turning now to
(59) Radio Resource Management, RRM, circuit 1100:
(60) The RRM circuit 1100 may be deployed in an eNodeB and contains and inter-Cell RRM unit 1110, an Intra-Cell RRM unit 1120, and a Scheduling unit 1130.
(61) The Inter-Cell RRM 1110 unit is handling handovers to cells outside the super-cell.
(62) The Intra-Cell RRM 1120 unit is handling the mobility within the super-cell, including tracking and mapping of UEs into segments and mapping of segments to two or more physical sites 1125. Since the group of UEs is moving, the mapping of segment to physical sites is changing over time. The reason for mapping a segment to a minimum of two physical sites is that at some point the group of UEs will cross the border between sites and this crossing shall be seamless.
(63) The Intra-Cell unit 1120 further keeps track of whether segments overlap each other, by which it provides information to the Scheduling unit 1130 so it can take into account that resources at the concerned physical sites are to be shared between UEs in two (or more) segments. Moreover, when a segment is approaching a super-cell border the Intra-Cell RRM unit 1120 is notifying the Inter-Cell RRM unit 1110 which then prepares handovers to neighbor cell(s).
(64) Scheduling Unit 1130:
(65) The scheduling unit 1130 contains information about one or more segments 1135 where information and allocations for UEs mapped to the each respective segment are stored. Each segment page can be viewed as a large registry or memory page. This is where the allocations and scheduling of individual UEs is handled. In prior art there would be one such page per cell and carrier.
(66) Baseband Processing Circuit 1140:
(67) The Baseband Processing circuit 1140 may be deployed in an eNodeB and comprises a User plane packet router 1150 which routs UE-specific packets from a Serving Gateway, SGW, to Baseband processing units 1160 assigned to the respective segment to which the UE belongs. There is one Baseband processing unit 1160 per segment, thus each baseband processing unit 1160 is serving two or more dynamically assigned physical sites (e.g. antenna sites/cell sites/antenna nodes). In prior art there would be one baseband processing unit per cell and carrier. Segments that are overlapping, fully or partially, are handled by a single Baseband Processing unit 1160.
(68) The Baseband Processing circuit 1140 further contains a Baseband Signal Router 1170, which relays the baseband signals to and from RF circuits 1190 for each physical site, based on the segment-to-site mapping determined by the Intra-Cell RRM unit 1120.
(69) Transceiver Circuit 1180:
(70) There is one transceiver circuit 1180 per physical site (e.g. antenna site/cell site/antenna node), deployed in e.g. a RRU or RRH. The transceiver unit 1180 may contain Delay circuitry 1185, allowing the DL and UL timing to be shifted compared to the neighboring sites. Moreover the transceiver circuit contains a RF circuit 1190 that modulates baseband signals to radio frequency and vice versa.
(71) Delay Configuration Circuit 1175:
(72) There may be one Delay configuration circuit 1175, which is used for configuring the delays to be used by the Delay circuitry 1185 (if used). The Delay configuration circuit 1175 is typically located in the eNodeB.
(73) Antennas Nodes 1195:
(74) Each cell site is served by an Antenna node 1195, where all antenna nodes 1195 form lobes in the same direction along a path/track (as discussed above), with exception for one of the outermost antenna groups which may form lobes in both directions along the track.
(75) The distance between antenna nodes 1195 and the signal power levels are tuned such that a first antenna node forms a lobe that is oriented in the same direction along the track as the lobe of a second adjacent antenna node, the second antenna node forms a lobe that is oriented in the same direction relative the tracks as the lobe of a third antenna node, and so on as discussed in detail above. Power levels are such that standardized side conditions for cell detection and demodulation are met regardless of where the UE is situated between any of the antenna nodes.
(76) The first antenna node may in addition to having a lobe oriented in same direction along the tracks as a lobe of a second antenna node, also have a lobe that is oriented in the opposite direction along the tracks, bordering a neighbor cell.
(77) Turning now to
(78) The method comprises a number of actions:
(79) Action 1201:
(80) The cluster of UEs associated with a segment is tracked by means of updating the information on where each UE is located—both in which cell and the approximate distance to the cell border, as deduced e.g. from applied timing advance, measured signal strength, and/or Doppler shift (indicative of velocity of UE towards or away from base station which together with time between Doppler detections can be used to determined relative change in distance).
(81) Action 1203:
(82) It is checked whether any of the UEs seem to part from the cluster, as determined from the updated information about the UE's position relative to the position of the cluster of UEs. This could for instance include comparing the change in UE position with the average change in position of the cluster of UEs.
(83) Action 1205:
(84) If a UE deviates from the cluster (1203; YES), it is evaluated whether the UE better belongs to another existing segment, or whether to create a new segment to associate with that UE. Should this step result in a consolidation of two (or more) clusters into one, the empty segments are deleted. For this flow it is assumed that the current segment is the one kept.
(85) Action 1207:
(86) It is checked whether the cluster is moving close to the border of a cell within the super cell, i.e., whether it is about to get into coverage of another site still belonging to the super cell and thus having the same physical layer cell identity and configuration.
(87) Action 1209:
(88) If it is found that the cluster is about to cross the border into another site still within the same super-cell (1207; YES) the segment is moved to include the new cell (site) in the direction the cluster of UEs is moving, and the trailing cell is released. The mapping of Segment-to-sites which essentially dictates which cells are to transmit information to the UEs in the concerned cluster is updated.
(89) Action 1211:
(90) It is checked whether any segments are overlapping each other, since that would imply that the cell capacity has to be split between UEs associated with the overlapping segments.
(91) Action 1213:
(92) In case one or more other segments are overlapping with the current segment (1211; YES) the cell capacity has to be shared between UEs associated with the overlapping segments. The available allocations for the current segment's page are updated to reflect this. Moreover the Segment-to-baseband processing unit mapping is configured to handle the communication with UEs belonging to the overlapping segments.
(93) Action 1215:
(94) In case the current segment is not overlapping any other segment (1211; NO) the whole cell capacity can be shared among the UEs associated with the current segment. The available allocations for the current segment's page are updated to reflect this. Moreover, in case the current segment was overlapping one or more other segments immediately before, the Segment-to-baseband processing unit mapping is updated to have one baseband processing unit serving the current segment only.
(95) Action 1217:
(96) The network node (e.g. base station) schedules the UEs associated with the current segment according to the available allocations (capacity) stated in the segment's page. This scheduling strategy continues until it is detected there are any changes in available capacity. The flow is repeated from action 1201.
(97) Action 1219:
(98) In case it is determined that the cluster of UEs associated with the current segment do not approach a cell border inside the super-cell (1207; NO), it is checked whether it is approaching the border of the super-cell. If not (1219; NO), the flow continues at action 1211.
(99) Action 1221:
(100) In case the cluster of UEs associated with the current segment is approaching the border of the super-cell (1219; YES), handover procedure for handover of the UEs to a bordering neighbor cell is initiated.
(101) Action 1223:
(102) After the handover procedure it is checked whether any UEs remain associated to segment. If so (1223; NO) the flow continues at action 1205.
(103) Action 1225:
(104) If all UEs have been handed over and no UEs are associated with the current segment (1223; YES), the current segment is deleted (memory cleared, mappings cleared, registers flushed and ready to be reused, etcetera).
(105)
(106) The method comprises a number of actions:
(107) Action 1250:
(108) A UE is getting handed over from a neighbor cell to the super-cell. UE position at entrance to the super-cell is established and velocity of movement may be estimated e.g. from Doppler shift or be provided by the network node managing the neighboring cell.
(109) Action 1251:
(110) It is evaluated whether the newly handed over UE can be associated with an existing segment, or whether to create a new segment to host the UE.
(111) Turning now to
(112) The instructions that are executable by the processor 1302 may be software in the form of a computer program 1341. The computer program 1341 may be contained in or by a carrier 1342, which may provide the computer program 1341 to the memory 1304 and processor 1302. The carrier 1342 may be in any suitable form including an electronic signal, an optical signal, a radio signal or a computer readable storage medium.
(113) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative to: p1 control the antenna nodes to maintain one and the same downlink radio frame timing and to maintain one and the same timing offset between downlink and uplink.
(114) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative to: control the antenna nodes to maintain respective downlink radio frame timings that differ between consecutive antenna nodes by a respective timing value that is proportional to a size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes, and to maintain respective timing offsets between downlink and uplink that differ from each other by a respective timing offset value that is proportional to the size of respective cell maintained by the consecutive antenna nodes.
(115) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative to: control the antenna nodes such that a first set of antenna nodes among the plurality of antenna nodes maintains communication with a first set of wireless communication devices among the plurality of wireless communication devices by utilizing a set of radio communication resources, and such that a second set of antenna nodes among the plurality of antenna nodes maintains communication with a second set of wireless communication devices among the plurality of wireless communication devices by utilizing said set of radio communication resources, and operative such that all radio cells maintained by the first set of antenna nodes are geographically separated from all radio cells maintained by the second set of antenna nodes.
(116) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative to: control the antenna nodes such that antenna nodes are deleted from and added to the first set of the antenna nodes in dependence of a movement of the first set of wireless communication devices along the path, and such that nodes are deleted from and added to the second set of the antenna nodes in dependence of a movement of the second set of wireless communication devices along the path.
(117) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative to: determine the movement of any of the first set of wireless communication devices and the second set of wireless communication devices along the path by any of: determine an uplink signal strength associated with consecutive antenna nodes, determine a Doppler shift of uplink signals, obtain a signal measurement report from at least one wireless communication device, determine an accumulated timing advance, TA, value and a TA update rate associated with at least one wireless communication device, determine an uplink path loss, and obtain information from an operator of vehicles that carries at least one wireless communication device along the path.
(118) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative such that carrier aggregation is utilized, and operative to: control the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node away from which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same primary cell.
(119) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative such that carrier aggregation is utilized, and operative to: control the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node away from which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same secondary cell.
(120) In some embodiments, the network node 1300 is operative such that carrier aggregation is utilized, and operative to: control the antenna nodes such that each consecutive antenna node towards which the wireless communication device is moving maintains one and the same secondary cell.
(121)
(122) The node 1400 may comprise further modules that are configured to perform in a similar manner as, e.g., the node 1300 described above in connection with
(123) As used herein, the term “processing module” may refer to a processing circuit, a processing unit, a processor, an Application Specific integrated Circuit (ASIC), a Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) or the like. As an example, a processor, an ASIC, an FPGA or the like may comprise one or more processor kernels. In some examples, the processing module may be embodied by a software module or hardware module. Any such module may be a determining means, estimating means, capturing means, associating means, comparing means, identification means, selecting means, receiving means, transmitting means or the like as disclosed herein. As an example, the expression “means” may be a module, such as a determining module, selecting module, etc.
(124) As used herein, the expression “configured to” may mean that a processing circuit is configured to, or adapted to, by means of software configuration and/or hardware configuration, perform one or more of the actions described herein.
(125) As used herein, the term “memory” may refer to a hard disk, a magnetic storage medium, a portable computer diskette or disc, flash memory, random access memory (RAM) or the like. Furthermore, the term “memory” may refer to an internal register memory of a processor or the like.
(126) As used herein, the term “computer readable medium” may be a Universal Serial Bus (USB) memory, a DVD-disc, a Blu-ray disc, a software module that is received as a stream of data, a Flash memory, a hard drive, a memory card, such as a MemoryStick, a Multimedia Card (MMC), etc.
(127) As used herein, the term “computer readable code units” may be text of a computer program, parts of or an entire binary file representing a computer program in a compiled format or anything there between.
(128) As used herein, the terms “number”, “value” may be any kind of digit, such as binary, real, imaginary or rational number or the like. Moreover, “number”, “value” may be one or more characters, such as a letter or a string of letters. “number”, “value” may also be represented by a bit string.
(129) As used herein, the expression “in some embodiments” has been used to indicate that the features of the embodiment described may be combined with any other embodiment disclosed herein.
(130) Even though embodiments of the various aspects have been described, many different alterations, modifications and the like thereof will become apparent for those skilled in the art. The described embodiments are therefore not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure.