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WO1996002984A1 - A method in a diversity receiver - Google Patents

A method in a diversity receiver Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1996002984A1
WO1996002984A1 PCT/SE1995/000786 SE9500786W WO9602984A1 WO 1996002984 A1 WO1996002984 A1 WO 1996002984A1 SE 9500786 W SE9500786 W SE 9500786W WO 9602984 A1 WO9602984 A1 WO 9602984A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
receiver
antenna
message
reception quality
preamble
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/SE1995/000786
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Dag E:son ÅKERBERG
Original Assignee
Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson filed Critical Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson
Priority to AU29945/95A priority Critical patent/AU2994595A/en
Publication of WO1996002984A1 publication Critical patent/WO1996002984A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B7/00Radio transmission systems, i.e. using radiation field
    • H04B7/02Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas
    • H04B7/04Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas
    • H04B7/08Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas at the receiving station
    • H04B7/0802Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas at the receiving station using antenna selection
    • H04B7/0805Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas at the receiving station using antenna selection with single receiver and antenna switching
    • H04B7/0808Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas at the receiving station using antenna selection with single receiver and antenna switching comparing all antennas before reception
    • H04B7/0811Diversity systems; Multi-antenna system, i.e. transmission or reception using multiple antennas using two or more spaced independent antennas at the receiving station using antenna selection with single receiver and antenna switching comparing all antennas before reception during preamble or gap period
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L7/00Arrangements for synchronising receiver with transmitter
    • H04L7/04Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals
    • H04L7/041Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals using special codes as synchronising signal
    • H04L7/046Speed or phase control by synchronisation signals using special codes as synchronising signal using a dotting sequence

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method of selecting an antenna from two (or possibly more) antennas available in a diversity receiver.
  • This diversity receiver may form part of a transceiver unit in a mobile station intended for a DECT- type radio system, i.e. for a cordless person communication system of relatively short range, although with the possibil ⁇ ity of a mobile subscriber roaming over a large area.
  • the range between a base station and associated mobile stations is an essential criterion, particularly in systems of aforementioned kind, with regard to obtaining a cost- effective base station infrastructure and also with regard to obtaining a broad coverage radio system.
  • the power of a transmitted radio signal is typically inversely proportional to the fourth power of the distance between the transmitter and the receiver.
  • the area covered by the base station will be doubled with each 6 dB increase in receiver sensitivity, therewith enabling the number of base stations required to cover a large given area to be reduced by 50%.
  • the total cost of the system can also be greatly reduced, by improving receiver sensitivity.
  • sensitivity is meant here the minimum field strength at the receiver antenna which gives acceptable speech quality.
  • sensitivity the minimum field strength at the receiver antenna which gives acceptable speech quality.
  • the sensitivity limit is set to 1% burst error, i.e. only one burst in one-hundred may be in error (which is the same as saying that the so-called CRC error may be at most 1%) .
  • antenna diversity on the transmitter side or the receiver side will result in a marked improvement in sensi ⁇ tivity, with low cost in regard of typical fading environments in a radio system.
  • Antenna diversity involves separating two antennas in space or giving the two antennas different polarizations, so that a choice can be made between two radio paths, it being highly improbable that both paths will have a deep fading dip at one and the same time, i.e. that the signal strength will be low in both paths at one and the same time, because of fading.
  • Figure 10 in the aforesaid reference shows that the antenna diversity can result in a sensitivity increase of 10 dB (at 1% CRC error probability) .
  • the antenna path to be used is controlled by two different conditions. With one receiver for each of the two antennas, the control is per ⁇ formed after detection by comparing the quality of the two links for each burst, and data is selected from that link which had the best quality.
  • a less costly implementation is to have only one receiver together with a switch for the two antennas, wherein when the quality of a received burst is too poor, the receiver is switched to the other antenna for receiving the next burst.
  • the aforesaid decision time 10 ms in the case of the DECT system, is relatively long and the propagation conditions (fading, time dispersion) for a quickly moving mobile station are able to change during this period. It is, therefore, possible that the decision reached will be the wrong decision, meaning that detection of the actual information message will be made by the antenna which gives the poorer quality.
  • the present invention relates to a method of the kind defined in the introduction which combines the aforesaid cost- effectivemethod, according towhich only one receiver is used in diversity reception, with the aforesaid two-receiver principle, which provides reception properties that are independent of speed.
  • the inventive method is characterized by the method steps set forth in the following Claims.
  • Figure 1 is a block diagram illustrating a transmitter and a receiver with diversity in a radio communication system
  • Figure 2 is a diagram which illustrates frames and time slots and shows the configuration of messages transmitted in a TDMA system, with the intention of explaining the inventivemethod.
  • Figure 1 is a block diagram illustrating a transmitter S and a receiverM having diversity in a radio communication system, for instance in a DECT system in accordance with the afore- going.
  • the transmitter S may be included in the transmitter-receiver unit of a base station and is comprised of known components and circuits.
  • the transmitter sends radio signals in accor ⁇ dance with the TDMA principle, i.e. short bursts of control information and message information within given time slots in accordance with the following description.
  • Each signal time-divided in the transmitter S is comprised of a burst in a given time slot intended for a given receiver, and the bursts are transferred in a known manner, by suitable modula ⁇ tion and by means of a carrier wave having a given allotted frequency within the GHz range.
  • the receiver M is included in a mobile station which communi- cates with or which shall communicate with the base station.
  • the receiver has two antennas Al and A2, which, in the illustrated case, are connected to only one detector unit in the receiver M, by means of a switch SW.
  • the receiver detector is thus common to both of the antennas Al and A2.
  • the switch SW is controllable and is switched between its two positions by the detector unit in dependence on the quality of a burst from the radio signals sent by the transmitter S, this quality being determined by the detector unit.
  • the bit error rate BER of the detected bursts, the C/I ratio or some other known measurement may be used as a quality determining factor.
  • Figure 2 is a time diagram over frames la, lb, Ila, lib... and time slots S1...S12 within each frame that defines the so- called physical channels in a TDMA system, in this case particularly a DECT system.
  • Transmission and reception for both a base station and a mobile station are organized so that each alternate frame is a transmission frame and each other alternate frame is a reception frame.
  • Each frame contains a given number of time slots, in the DECT system 12 time slots SI...S12.
  • the time interval of a transmis- sion frame la and a reception frame lb is 10 ms.
  • a time slot e.g. S7
  • a time slot is about 0.4 ms (24 time slots in a 10 ms frame) .
  • the distance travelled by a subscriber during the 0.4 ms period must be short in comparison with the distance in space betweenthe fading dips.
  • the distance between the fading dips is about 8 cm at 1.9 GHz, and short relative distances are ⁇ 10%, i.e. ⁇ 8 mm.
  • the movement speed shall be maximum 20 m/s (72 kro/h) in order for the subscriber not to move further than 8 mm in the 0.4 ms period.
  • the antenna selection diversity is thus also effective in the case of vehicle-carried DECT.
  • Technology in which antenna selection diversity shall be effective at a walking speed (1 m/s) may therefore not receive on the same antenna for a period which is greater than 8 ms (20 x 0.4 ms).
  • the time slot during which the same antenna is used for receiving purposes must be shorter than 8 ms, otherwise the diversity will only provide a gain for stationary reception, (in which case the cheap standard diversity in DECT which provides no gain when the subscriber moves might just as well be used,
  • the transfer between the base station and the mobile takes place in time slot S7, wherein the mobile station will receive bursts from the base station in time slot S7 in each frame la, Ila... until reception has been terminated.
  • handover can take place when a new channel is chosen by or allocated to the mobile station, whereafter the transfer may be made in a time slot other than the earlier mentioned time slot S7.
  • Channel allocation in the DECT system is also dynamic, in other words the mobile station chooses from the total number of available channels that channel which is free at that moment in time and which has the lowest signal interference ratio C/I.
  • FIG. 2 shows a burst within a time slot S7.
  • the burst includes a preamble P which may have a length of 10 bits. This is followed by the actual information part D. This division of a message is generally known in the DECT system.
  • the message preamble P is used as a control message or as a synchronizing word for the receiver, and more particularly for its detector.
  • a synchronizing word may consist of alternate ones and zeros, for instance 01010101... (10 bits) .
  • the detector in the receiver M can synchronize itself to the following data message D.
  • the synchronizing word is divided into two parts PI and P2 so as to enable the detector in the receiver M to perform a quality measurement of the signals from each of the two antennas Al and A2 during a respective time interval PI and P2.
  • An interval Ql and Q2 between PI, P2 and between P2 and the data message D respec ⁇ tively are also reserved for switching of the switch SW between the two antennas Al, A2.
  • the switch when reception is started after channel allocation and activation in a known manner from the base station transmitter in response to the reception and detection of the synchronizing word, the switch will be positioned so that antenna Al is connected to the receiver detector, as illustrated in Figure 2.
  • the receiver detects the incoming synchronizing word, in the present case 01010101..., during the whole of the interval P, with the intention of ascertaining whether or not reception over the chosen channel is at all possible.
  • the inventive method is not a method of solely detecting a message by means of diversity, but a method of obtaining the best possible quality of a detected message when receiving with antenna diversity.
  • the receiver has detected the synchronizing word (01010101%) during the interval P by means of the antenna Al, even though a connected antenna A2 would have given a better detection result during precisely the synchronization part of the signal (frame la) .
  • the receiver detector has therewith detected the start time point of the preamble P in each burst.
  • the receiver is still connected to the antenna Al and the detector therewith detects and measures the reception quality of the synchronizing word received during the interval Pi.
  • the antenna A2 is connected to the receiver detector for similar detection of the synchroni ⁇ zing word, although this time during the interval P2.
  • a given small time interval Ql can be reserved during the interval P to enable switching of the antennas to be effected prior to said detection procedure and to ensure that the antennas will be switched at the correct instant with regard to the bit pattern of the synchronizing word.
  • the receiver detector detects and determines the reception qualityofthe synchronizingword received duringthe interval P2 in accordance with the same criterion as that used to determine the reception quality of the synchronizing word received during the interval PI. A comparison of the two measured qualities is then made during an interval Q2, which has been reserved for this purpose and for possible switching of the switch SW back to the antenna Al.
  • Antenna A2 is connected
  • the inventive method can also be applied with analog radio systems having antenna diversity if the system transfers messages thathave windows with short time intervals, where no traffic information is found.
  • a window can, therefore, be used in accordance with the method to contain the two part intervals PI and P2 in accordance with the aforegoing.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Radio Transmission System (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)

Abstract

A method of selecting in a DECT-type radio communications system in which the mobile stations have antenna diversity, i.e. two antennas (A1, A2), that antenna which will provide the best reception quality (e.g. the smallest bit error rate). The radio system transmits the messages, which include a preamble, i.e. an introductory part (P), prior to the actual message information (D). This message preamble includes a specific bit pattern 01010101... and can be used to synchronize the receiver of the mobile station. According to the proposed method, the bit pattern is divided into two parts (P1 and P2). Upon receipt of the message, the first part (P1) is used to assess the reception quality of one antenna and the second part (P2) is used to assess the reception quality of the second antenna. The measured qualities are then compared and that antenna which is found to have the best reception quality is selected to receive the following information message (D).

Description

A method in a diversity receiver
TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to a method of selecting an antenna from two (or possibly more) antennas available in a diversity receiver. This diversity receiver may form part of a transceiver unit in a mobile station intended for a DECT- type radio system, i.e. for a cordless person communication system of relatively short range, although with the possibil¬ ity of a mobile subscriber roaming over a large area.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART
The range between a base station and associated mobile stations is an essential criterion, particularly in systems of aforementioned kind, with regard to obtaining a cost- effective base station infrastructure and also with regard to obtaining a broad coverage radio system.
The power of a transmitted radio signal is typically inversely proportional to the fourth power of the distance between the transmitter and the receiver. Thus, the area covered by the base station will be doubled with each 6 dB increase in receiver sensitivity, therewith enabling the number of base stations required to cover a large given area to be reduced by 50%.
The total cost of the system can also be greatly reduced, by improving receiver sensitivity.
By sensitivity is meant here the minimum field strength at the receiver antenna which gives acceptable speech quality. For instance, there is described in "The Performance of DECT in the Outdoor 1.8 GHz Radio Channel" by L.B. Lopes and M.R. Heath, University of Leeds and BT Laboratories UK, a DECT system which operates in accordance with the TD A technique, in which the sensitivity limit is set to 1% burst error, i.e. only one burst in one-hundred may be in error (which is the same as saying that the so-called CRC error may be at most 1%) .
The use of antenna diversity on the transmitter side or the receiver side will result in a marked improvement in sensi¬ tivity, with low cost in regard of typical fading environments in a radio system. Antenna diversity involves separating two antennas in space or giving the two antennas different polarizations, so that a choice can be made between two radio paths, it being highly improbable that both paths will have a deep fading dip at one and the same time, i.e. that the signal strength will be low in both paths at one and the same time, because of fading.
Figure 10 in the aforesaid reference shows that the antenna diversity can result in a sensitivity increase of 10 dB (at 1% CRC error probability) .
The aforesaid reference also discloses that the antenna path to be used is controlled by two different conditions. With one receiver for each of the two antennas, the control is per¬ formed after detection by comparing the quality of the two links for each burst, and data is selected from that link which had the best quality. A less costly implementation is to have only one receiver together with a switch for the two antennas, wherein when the quality of a received burst is too poor, the receiver is switched to the other antenna for receiving the next burst.
In the DECT system described in the aforesaid reference, the time lapse between two consecutive bursts is 10 ms. The time taken to decide that the old antenna is poor and to change to the other antenna is therefore 10 ms. Figure 13 in the aforesaid reference shows that the simple diversity with a 10 ms switching delay is effective when mobile stations are stationary or move only very slowly. However, when the speed of the mobile station increases the diversity gain may be lost, because the mobile station will travel so far during the 10 ms period that an estimation of the radio path will no longer be of any assistance. The more expensive 2-radio post selection diversity gives a sensitivi¬ ty gain of 10 dB, irrespective of the speed at which the mobile station moves.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The aforesaid decision time, 10 ms in the case of the DECT system, is relatively long and the propagation conditions (fading, time dispersion) for a quickly moving mobile station are able to change during this period. It is, therefore, possible that the decision reached will be the wrong decision, meaning that detection of the actual information message will be made by the antenna which gives the poorer quality.
The present invention relates to a method of the kind defined in the introduction which combines the aforesaid cost- effectivemethod, according towhich only one receiver is used in diversity reception, with the aforesaid two-receiver principle, which provides reception properties that are independent of speed.
According to the present invention, there is chosen a method of using a given predetermined control word, for instance a synchronizing word, immediately prior to the actual message that contains the information to be detected, in order to test which of the two antennas of the receiver is best suited for this detection. This greatly improves the likelihood of the best antenna being chosen when receiving the message. Thus, it is the object of the present invention to provide a method of selecting or determining which of the two antennas in a diversity receiver will provide the best reception of an information message that immediately follows this determina- tion or selection of the optimal antenna.
The inventive method is characterized by the method steps set forth in the following Claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which
Figure 1 is a block diagram illustrating a transmitter and a receiver with diversity in a radio communication system; and
Figure 2 is a diagram which illustrates frames and time slots and shows the configuration of messages transmitted in a TDMA system, with the intention of explaining the inventivemethod.
BEST MODES OF CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
Figure 1 is a block diagram illustrating a transmitter S and a receiverM having diversity in a radio communication system, for instance in a DECT system in accordance with the afore- going.
The transmitter S may be included in the transmitter-receiver unit of a base station and is comprised of known components and circuits. The transmitter sends radio signals in accor¬ dance with the TDMA principle, i.e. short bursts of control information and message information within given time slots in accordance with the following description. Each signal time-divided in the transmitter S is comprised of a burst in a given time slot intended for a given receiver, and the bursts are transferred in a known manner, by suitable modula¬ tion and by means of a carrier wave having a given allotted frequency within the GHz range.
The receiver M is included in a mobile station which communi- cates with or which shall communicate with the base station. The receiver has two antennas Al and A2, which, in the illustrated case, are connected to only one detector unit in the receiver M, by means of a switch SW. The receiver detector is thus common to both of the antennas Al and A2. The switch SW is controllable and is switched between its two positions by the detector unit in dependence on the quality of a burst from the radio signals sent by the transmitter S, this quality being determined by the detector unit. The bit error rate BER of the detected bursts, the C/I ratio or some other known measurement may be used as a quality determining factor.
Figure 2 is a time diagram over frames la, lb, Ila, lib... and time slots S1...S12 within each frame that defines the so- called physical channels in a TDMA system, in this case particularly a DECT system. Transmission and reception for both a base station and a mobile station are organized so that each alternate frame is a transmission frame and each other alternate frame is a reception frame. Each frame contains a given number of time slots, in the DECT system 12 time slots SI...S12. In the DECT system, the time interval of a transmis- sion frame la and a reception frame lb is 10 ms.
In the DECT system, a time slot, e.g. S7, is about 0.4 ms (24 time slots in a 10 ms frame) . In order to obtain a radio link which is essentially constant during the reception of a 0.4 ms data packet, the distance travelled by a subscriber during the 0.4 ms period must be short in comparison with the distance in space betweenthe fading dips. The distance between the fading dips is about 8 cm at 1.9 GHz, and short relative distances are <10%, i.e. <8 mm. Thus, the movement speed shall be maximum 20 m/s (72 kro/h) in order for the subscriber not to move further than 8 mm in the 0.4 ms period. The antenna selection diversity is thus also effective in the case of vehicle-carried DECT. Technology in which antenna selection diversity shall be effective at a walking speed (1 m/s) may therefore not receive on the same antenna for a period which is greater than 8 ms (20 x 0.4 ms). In other words, the time slot during which the same antenna is used for receiving purposes must be shorter than 8 ms, otherwise the diversity will only provide a gain for stationary reception, (in which case the cheap standard diversity in DECT which provides no gain when the subscriber moves might just as well be used,
(see from line 16 on page 2 to line 7 on page 3) .
Transmission from the base station - reception in the mobile station take place in the frame la, while a burst is received in, e.g., time slot S7 within said frame, as shown in Figure 2.
Transmission from the mobile station and reception in the base station take place in frame lb. This is ignored in the present case, however, which deals solely with transmission base station-mobile station. The invention may, of course, also be applied in this case in accordance with the same principle.
Transmission from the base station - reception in the mobile station again takes place in frame Ila, similar to frame la, although detection in the receiver is different, as made evident below. Transmission and reception take place in frame lib, similar to frame lb.
In the Figure 2 illustration, the transfer between the base station and the mobile takes place in time slot S7, wherein the mobile station will receive bursts from the base station in time slot S7 in each frame la, Ila... until reception has been terminated. However, handover can take place when a new channel is chosen by or allocated to the mobile station, whereafter the transfer may be made in a time slot other than the earlier mentioned time slot S7. Channel allocation in the DECT system is also dynamic, in other words the mobile station chooses from the total number of available channels that channel which is free at that moment in time and which has the lowest signal interference ratio C/I.
Figure 2 shows a burst within a time slot S7. The burst includes a preamble P which may have a length of 10 bits. This is followed by the actual information part D. This division of a message is generally known in the DECT system.
As is known, the message preamble P is used as a control message or as a synchronizing word for the receiver, and more particularly for its detector. A synchronizing word may consist of alternate ones and zeros, for instance 01010101... (10 bits) . In this regard, the detector in the receiver M can synchronize itself to the following data message D.
According to the present method, the synchronizing word is divided into two parts PI and P2 so as to enable the detector in the receiver M to perform a quality measurement of the signals from each of the two antennas Al and A2 during a respective time interval PI and P2. An interval Ql and Q2 between PI, P2 and between P2 and the data message D respec¬ tively are also reserved for switching of the switch SW between the two antennas Al, A2.
It is assumed initially that when reception is started after channel allocation and activation in a known manner from the base station transmitter in response to the reception and detection of the synchronizing word, the switch will be positioned so that antenna Al is connected to the receiver detector, as illustrated in Figure 2. The receiver detects the incoming synchronizing word, in the present case 01010101..., during the whole of the interval P, with the intention of ascertaining whether or not reception over the chosen channel is at all possible. It may happen that recep¬ tion over the chosen channel is poorer than if the receiver had instead been set to receive over the antenna A2, although in order for reception of the entire burst to be acceptable it should be possible for the receiver to detect the synchroni¬ zing word over the poorest antenna, since it is easier to detect the synchronizing word correctly (gives less bit errors) than it is to detect the subsequent data message. The inventive method is not a method of solely detecting a message by means of diversity, but a method of obtaining the best possible quality of a detected message when receiving with antenna diversity.
Thus, it is assumed in the following that the receiver has detected the synchronizing word (01010101...) during the interval P by means of the antenna Al, even though a connected antenna A2 would have given a better detection result during precisely the synchronization part of the signal (frame la) . The receiver detector has therewith detected the start time point of the preamble P in each burst.
During the next reception frame Ila, time slot S7, the receiver is still connected to the antenna Al and the detector therewith detects and measures the reception quality of the synchronizing word received during the interval Pi. Upon completion of this procedure, the antenna A2 is connected to the receiver detector for similar detection of the synchroni¬ zing word, although this time during the interval P2. A given small time interval Ql can be reserved during the interval P to enable switching of the antennas to be effected prior to said detection procedure and to ensure that the antennas will be switched at the correct instant with regard to the bit pattern of the synchronizing word. The receiver detector detects and determines the reception qualityofthe synchronizingword received duringthe interval P2 in accordance with the same criterion as that used to determine the reception quality of the synchronizing word received during the interval PI. A comparison of the two measured qualities is then made during an interval Q2, which has been reserved for this purpose and for possible switching of the switch SW back to the antenna Al.
If it is assumed that the reception qualities determined in the intervals PI and P2 are respectively referenced QMl and QM2, the comparison and decision are made in accordance with the following:
Antenna Al is connected
If QMl > QM2, no switching is made to antenna A2.
If QMl < QM2, switching is made to the antenna A2 during the interval Q2.
Antenna A2 is connected
If QMl > QM2, a switching is made to antenna Al during the interval Q2.
If QMl < QM2, no switching is made.
Thus, the conditions for proceeding in accordance with the inventive method are:
a) The presence of a control method (synchronizing word) having a regular and specific bit pattern, so that division of the two intervals PI and P2 can be made and so that equal determination of reception quality can be performed. b) The presence of the control message at the beginning of the actual message that shall be received with improved reception quality.
The inventive method can also be applied with analog radio systems having antenna diversity if the system transfers messages thathave windows with short time intervals, where no traffic information is found. Such a window can, therefore, be used in accordance with the method to contain the two part intervals PI and P2 in accordance with the aforegoing.

Claims

1. A method of selecting a given antenna from, two available antennas (Al, A2) in a diversity receiver which is included in a radio system and which is connected to the first (Al) of said antennas, wherein the radio messages to the receiver are transferred and received within a given time slot in mutually sequential frames (la, Ila...) , wherein eachmessage includes a preamble (P) and a data/information part (D) , and wherein the preamble is comprised of a regular bit pattern (010101...) known to the receiver, characterized in that a) the radio receiver receives the preamble (P) over said first said antenna (Al) and determines or assesses the reception quality of said bit pattern during a first time interval (PI) of said message preamble; b) the radio receiver is switched (SW) to the second (A2) of said two antennas and determines or assesses the reception quality of said bit pattern during a second time interval (P2) of said message preamble (P) ; and c) the radio receiver compares the determined reception qualities and chooses the antenna that exhibited the highest reception quality to receive the data/information part (D) of said message.
2. A method according to Claim 1, characterized in that the criterion to be used in determining reception quality is established prior to determining the reception quality of said first and second parts of the message preamble and comparing these qualities, by virtue of being able to establish in the frame which precedes the frame in which said quality determi¬ nation is effected the location of said message in a time slot, so that the method can be carried out.
3. A method according to Claim l, characterized in that the messagepreamble is comprised of a synchronizingpatternwhich is intended for radio transmission and which is intended for use in synchronizingthe receiver to the information contained in the transmitted message.
4. A method according to Claim 3, characterized in that said synchronizing pattern is comprised of a sequence 010101....
PCT/SE1995/000786 1994-07-15 1995-06-27 A method in a diversity receiver WO1996002984A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU29945/95A AU2994595A (en) 1994-07-15 1995-06-27 A method in a diversity receiver

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE9402493A SE9402493L (en) 1994-07-15 1994-07-15 Method in a diversity receiver
SE9402493-2 1994-07-15

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
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Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0808033A2 (en) * 1996-05-14 1997-11-19 Matsushita Communication Industrial Co., Ltd. Data receiving apparatus with antenna diversity
WO1998010531A1 (en) * 1996-09-04 1998-03-12 Ascom Tech Ag Preamble for the assessment of channel impulse response in a antenna diversity system
WO1998028861A2 (en) * 1996-12-10 1998-07-02 Nokia Telecommunications Oy Diversity method and base station equipment
EP0886388A2 (en) * 1997-06-19 1998-12-23 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Transmitter, receiver and power control in a data transmission system
WO1999034533A1 (en) * 1997-12-30 1999-07-08 Ericsson, Inc. An advanced antenna diversity mechanism
WO1999034535A1 (en) * 1997-12-30 1999-07-08 Ericsson, Inc. An improved antenna diversity switching system for tdma-based telephones
WO1999034534A1 (en) * 1997-12-30 1999-07-08 Ericsson, Inc. A unified antenna diversity switching system for tdma-based telephones
WO1999038275A1 (en) * 1998-01-23 1999-07-29 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson Antenna switching diversity
NL1008198C2 (en) * 1998-02-04 1999-08-05 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Radio receiver with switched diversity.
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US6002672A (en) * 1996-10-25 1999-12-14 Nortel Networks Corporation Diversity antenna selection
US5960046A (en) * 1996-12-03 1999-09-28 Northern Telecom Limited Preamble based selection diversity in a time division multiple access radio system
US6032033A (en) * 1996-12-03 2000-02-29 Nortel Networks Corporation Preamble based selection diversity in a time division multiple access radio system using digital demodulation
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