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| United States Patent | 5497397 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5497397.html |
| Inventor(s) | Hershey; John E. (Ballston Lake, NY);
Saulnier; Gary J. (Rexford, NY) |
| Abstract | Data words are transmitted over a radio channel with a novel modulation
scheme which transmits data in parallel. An entire data word is modulated
by separating a carrier frequency band into a number of discrete `tones`.
Tone T.sub.1 is set to a zero phase shift in order to provide timing in
synchronization of the signal. The remaining tones are phase shifted
according to a predetermined convention, thereby encoding the bits of the
data word. The phase shifts for all tones comprises a spectrum which is
transmitted to a receiver simultaneously. A receiver monitors tone T.sub.1
for zero phase shifts to provide synchronization of the signal. The
remaining tones are analyzed for their phase shift to provide bits which
are assembled into a transmitted data word. Since the bits are transmitted
in parallel as the data word, as opposed to conventional modulation
schemes, the throughput is increased. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5497397 |
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Parallel dataword modulation scheme |
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| Publication Date |
March 5, 1996 |
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| Filing Date |
June 29, 1994 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This invention is related to U.S. patent applications Ser. No. 08/267,347,
filed Jun. 29, 1994, "New Mobile Telecommunications Device and Service" by
Amer Hassan, John Hershey, Howard Lester, Charles Puckette; Ser. No.
08/267,328, filed Jun. 29, 1994, "Datagram Communication Service over a
Cellular Telephone Network" by John Hershey, Amer Hassan; Ser. No.
08/267,348 filed Jun. 29, 1994, "Datagram Message Communication Service
Employing a Hybrid Network" by John Hershey; all assigned to the present
assignee.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Scope of the Invention
The present invention relates to digital radio modulation and more
particularly, modulation of a data word in parallel.
2. Description of Related Art
Data or digitized analog information, is typically transmitted via
radiowaves from a transmitter to a receiver. There are many ways of
modulating the data to encode the digital information. One such way is to
map data bits to phase shifts of a carrier wave. Therefore, a carrier wave
has phase shifts which are modulated according to the input data
transmitted and received at a receiver which then identifies the phase
shift and the carrier signal to recover the encoded data.
Two such types of modulation are quadrature phase shift keyed (QPSK)
modulation, and differential quadrature phase shift keyed (DQPSK)
modulation.
There are also frequency modulation schemes in which data is encoded as the
frequency of the carrier such as frequency shift keying (FSK) and
continuous FSK (CPFSK).
There are also amplitude modulation schemes such as two or four level
amplitude modulation (AM), and quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM).
In each of the above modulation schemes, a change in the frequency, phase,
or amplitude modulates a single-bit, or several bits, of information being
transmitted sequentially.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to transmit several data bits in
parallel and provide an improved data communication system.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a radio
transmission system which provides greater throughput than conventional
modulation schemes.
SUMMARY Of THE INVENTION
Digital information, in the form of data words are transmitted in parallel
over a radio channel.
A carrier signal spectrum is synthesized and divided into a number of
carrier tones with one carrier tone being used for synchronization and the
phase of each of the other carrier tones each representing a bit value of
the data word.
The carrier tones are phase shifted by a predetermined phase shift if the
corresponding bit has a value of `1`, and not shifted or shifted by a
second predetermined phase shift, if the value of the corresponding bit is
`0` to result in data word tones.
The data word tones and the synchronization tone are synthesized by using
an inverse transform to produce a time-varying radio signal and
transmitting the radio signal to a receiver.
At the receiver, the radio signal is transformed into the frequency domain.
The synchronization tone is monitored by the receiver to determine
synchronization and separate the radio signal into data word intervals
each pertaining to a data word. The spectrum of the radio signal for each
data word interval is transforming into the frequency domain and sectioned
into signals representing each data bit.
The effect of the receiver processing is that each tone is compared to a
synthesized carrier tone to determine the phase shift and decode a bit
value. The bit values are assembled into a data word. Since many bit
values are encoded by phase shifts, many bits may be transmitted
simultaneously.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
While the novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity
in the appended claims, the invention, both as to organization and
content, will be better understood and appreciated, along with other
objects and features thereof, from the following detailed description
taken in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of a digital radio communication
system according to the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a frequency vs. phase diagram illustrating a data word modulation
scheme according to the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a presently preferred embodiment of the
present invention showing a transmitter 20 and a receiver 120. Digital
information, in the form of parallel data words, desired to be transmitted
is provided by a data source 5. The digital information may also be
provided by an analog source 2 that is sampled by an analog to digital
(A/D) converter 4, as shown in phantom.
A carrier spectrum generator 17 synthesizes a complex spectrum comprised of
amplitudes and phases for a carrier signal to be employed in transmitting
the data words.
A parallel modulator 19 coupled to the carrier spectrum generator receives
the carrier signal spectrum and sections it into frequency bands defined
as "tones". The tones are numbered from a zeroeth frequency, T.sub.0, to a
last tone T.sub.N, as shown in FIG. 2. It is envisioned that there will be
2.sup.M tones where M is 5 or 6. In the complex frequency domain, each
tone is represented by an amplitude and a phase.
The data words desired to be transmitted are provided to parallel modulator
and used to alter the phase of tones T.sub.1 through T.sub.N according to
a predetermined modulation convention. In the example of FIG. 2, a `0` is
modulated as a zero phase shift of a tone and a `1` is a .pi. phase shift
of a tone. T.sub.0 is the DC term and is not used. T.sub.1 is set to zero
phase shift to allow synchronization of the radio signal. The first four
bits of the data word being transmitted, T.sub.2, T.sub.3, T.sub.4,
T.sub.5, in FIG. 2 are `1011` with the last bit, T.sub.N being `1`.
In FIG. 1, the entire set of tones for a data word of time period `t` is
spectrum S.sub.t. Spectrum S.sub.t is converted to a time-varying radio
message signal m(t) by an inverse discrete transform (IDT) unit 18. The
inverse discrete transform may be an inverse Fourier, inverse Hadamard, or
inverse Discrete Cosine as transform.
Message signal m(t) is passed to a radio frequency (RF) amplifier 22 which
creates an RF signal transmitted through antenna 24 which is received by
antenna 124 of receiver 120.
The transmitted signal is sensed by a receiving antenna 124, passed to an
RF preamplifier 122 and heterodyned by a down converter 118 to provide an
intermediate frequency (IF) signal, m'(t) which is the equivalent of the
message signal m(t).
A discrete transform unit 50, performs a transform which is the inverse of
the operation executed by IDT unit 18, and transforms the message signal
m'(t) into a spectrum S'.sub.t comprised of tones T'.sub.2, T'.sub.3,
T'.sub.4, T'.sub.5, . . . T'.sub.N, which correspond to tones of the
employed in parallel modulator 19 in transmitter 20.
Synchronization unit 60 monitors the S'.sub.t signal to determine regularly
spaced `0` phase shifts in tone T'.sub.1. This provides the synchronizing
required to distinguish a spectrum, S'.sub.t1, of a data word from time
t.sub.1 from a spectrum S'.sub.t2 from time t.sub.2. Synchronizer
separates these spectra and provides them to phase shift decoder 110.
A carrier spectrum generator 117 synthesizes a complex spectrum for a
carrier signal to be employed in transmitting the data words comprised of
amplitudes and phases, the same as the carrier spectrum generator in
transmitter 20.
Phase shift decoder 110 determines phase shifts for each tone, which may be
determined by comparing the phase of each tone with a corresponding tone
from carrier spectrum generator 117. Phase shift decoder 110 assembles a
data word representing these phase shifts. An output device 103 then
utilizes the decoded data words.
In an alternative embodiment, the output device may also be a digital to
analog (D/A) converter 104 which converts the data words into an analog
signal which is utilized by an analog output device 102.
While only certain preferred features of the invention have been
illustrated and described herein, many modifications and changes will
occur to those skilled in the an. It is, therefore, to be understood that
the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and
changes as fall within the true spirit of the invention.
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Description  |
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