Title :
Maximum-likelihood synchronization, equalization, and sequence estimation for unknown time-varying frequency-selective Rician channels
Author :
Hart, Brian D. ; Taylor, Desmond P.
Author_Institution :
Telecommun. Eng., Australian Nat. Univ., Canberra, ACT, Australia
fDate :
2/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper develops a receiver structure to perform jointly maximum-likelihood (ML) synchronization, equalization, and detection of a linearly modulated signal transmitted over a time-varying frequency-selective Rician-faded channel, corrupted by additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN). The receiver is particularly suited to a fast-fading channel, where other receivers that rely on estimating the channel cannot track it quickly enough. The signal mean and autocovariance are needed, and a scheme is proposed for estimating these quantities adaptively. The receiver processes the specular and diffuse components (corresponding to the signal mean and autocovariance) separately. Processing the known specular component is the classical detection problem. The unknown diffuse component is processed by predictors. We show that the predictors can achieve synchronization in a novel manner, if synchronization is required. A union bound on the receiver´s bit-error rate (BER) is derived, and it tightly bounds simulated BERs in fast-fading at high signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs)
Keywords :
Gaussian noise; Rician channels; adaptive estimation; coding errors; covariance analysis; error statistics; fading; land mobile radio; maximum likelihood detection; maximum likelihood estimation; modulation; prediction theory; radio receivers; sequences; synchronisation; time-varying channels; white noise; AWGN; BER; Rician channels; SNR; additive white Gaussian noise; bit-error rate; diffuse component; fast-fading channel; high signal-to-noise ratios; linearly modulated signal; maximum-likelihood detection; maximum-likelihood equalization; maximum-likelihood synchronization; mobile terminals; predictors; receiver; signal autocovariance; signal detection; signal mean; specular component; time-varying frequency-selective channel; AWGN; Bit error rate; Chirp modulation; Fading; Frequency estimation; Frequency synchronization; Maximum likelihood detection; Maximum likelihood estimation; Rician channels; Signal to noise ratio;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on