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40.2.3 ISDB‐T Signals for Timing and Ranging

Оглавление

The Terrestrial Integrated Service Digital Broadcasting (ISDB‐T) is one of the earliest standards for digital TV, digital audio, and data, developed by Japan’s Association of Radio Industries and Business (ARIB) [63]. Also adopting OFDM, ISDB‐T groups its subcarriers within a transmission channel into 13 segments, which explains the name: band segmented transmission (BST‐OFDM). Thus, ISDB‐T supports hierarchical transmission using hierarchical layers where each layer has one or more segments with their own transmission parameters (such as different inner coding rate, modulation scheme, and time interleaving length). In this way, different services such as high definition television (HDTV), multi‐channel simple definition television (SDTV), and data can be transmitted in one frequency channel. For example, an ISDB‐T implementation has 13 segments over a channel bandwidth of 6, 7, or 8 MHz. For audio and data program transmissions, ISDB‐TSB (SB stands for sound broadcasting) uses only one or three segments in the channel while ISDB‐Tmm (Terrestrial Mobile Multimedia) can use up to 33 segments by concatenating blocks of the 13‐segment (Type A) and the 1‐segment (Type B) over a maximum band of 14.5 MHz.


Figure 40.12 Test results of pilot‐carriers‐based delay tracking for refined TOA estimation [54].

Source: Reproduced with permission of IEEE.

As shown in Figure 40.13(a), each channel of 6 MHz has 13 segments with each segment occupying a bandwidth of 6 MHz/14 = 428.6 kHz. The 6 MHz channel allows for three operating modes, which differ in the number of carriers and carrier spacing Δf as well as the effective bandwidth. Also shown in the figure is an example allocation of segments into Layer A with 1 segment for partial reception at headheld receivers, Layer B with 7 segments for mobile reception of SDTV, and Layer C with 5 segments for fixed reception of anbotehr SDTV. The 13 segments in the channel can also be allocated into Layer A with 1 segment for partial reception at headheld receivers and Layer B with 12 segments for mobile and fixed reception of HDTV.

As shown in Figure 40.13(b), each ISDB‐T frame has 204 OFDM symbols. Each symbol has an effective symbol part with duration Tsym = 252 μs, 504 μs, and 1008 μs for modes 1, 2, and 3, respectively, and a guard interval with duration TGI = 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, or 1/32Tsym. As a result, the duration of a symbol ranges from the shortest 53.0145 ms (mode 1 with 1/32 guard interval (GI)) to the longest 257.04 ms (mode 3 with ¼ GI). At the sampling rate of fs = 512/63 MHz, the size of FFT/IFFT is 2048 (2K), 4096 (4K), and 8192 (8K) for modes 1, 2, and 3, respectively.


Figure 40.13 Layered segments of ISDB‐T channel and OFDM symbols in a segment configuration.

Figure 40.13(c) shows the OFDM segment configuration in mode 1 with 108 carriers for differential modulation (left) and synchronous modulation (right), respectively. In differential modulation, a continual pilot (CP) occupies the carrier 0. In addition, there are continuous carriers dedicated to transmission and multiplexing configuration control (TMCC) and auxiliary channel (AC) to convey control information. According to [63], there are 1 CP, 2 AC1 and 4 AC2, and 5 TMCC in mode 1; 1 CP, 4 AC1 and 9 AC2, and 10 TMCC in mode 2; and 1 CP, 8 AC1 and 19 AC2, and 20 TMCC in mode 3. Similarly, in synchronous modulation, a scattered pilot (SP) is inserted once every 12 carriers in the frequency direction and once every 4 symbols in the time direction. In addition, there are 2 AC1 and 1 TMCC in mode 1, 4 AC1 and 2 TMCC in mode 2, and 8 AC1 and 4 TMCC in mode 3, respectively, which appear in every symbol but are arranged pseudorandomly in the frequency direction.

As in DVB‐T, both CPs and SPs are produced by PRBS generators with a unique initial condition for each segment [63]. A detailed comparison of ISDB‐T with ATSC‐8VSB and DVB‐T can be found in [35]. From the viewpoint of timing and ranging, the methods of cross‐correlation of cyclic prefix and pilot‐based correlation as well as the CIR estimated from pilots described for DVB‐T in Section 40.2.2 are applicable to ISDB‐T. A system for the use of ISDB‐T signals for position location is disclosed in [64].

Position, Navigation, and Timing Technologies in the 21st Century

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