Title :
Broadband interference excision for software-radio spread-spectrum communications using time-frequency distribution synthesis
Author :
Lach, Stephen R. ; Amin, Moeness G. ; Lindsey, Alan R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Villanova Univ., PA, USA
fDate :
4/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A new method is introduced for interference excision in spread-spectrum communications that is conducive to software-radio applications. Spare processing capacity in the receiver permits the use of time-frequency techniques to synthesize a nonstationary interference from the time-frequency domain using least squares methods. The synthesized signal is then subtracted from the incoming data in the time domain, leading to jammer removal and increased signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio at the input of the correlator. The paper focuses on jammers with constant modulus that are uniquely described by their instantaneous frequency characteristics. With this a priori knowledge, the jammer signal amplitude is restored by projecting each sample of the synthesized signal to a circle representing its constant modulus. With the phase matching provided by the least squares synthesis method and amplitude matching underlying the projection operation, a significant improvement in receiver performance/bit-error rates is achieved over the case where no projection is performed. Software-radio aspects including computational complexity and processing modes are also discussed
Keywords :
computational complexity; error statistics; interference suppression; jamming; least squares approximations; radio receivers; signal synthesis; software architecture; spread spectrum communication; telecommunication computing; time-frequency analysis; DS-SS; amplitude matching; bit-error rates; broadband interference excision; computational complexity; constant modulus jammers; correlator; instantaneous frequency characteristics; jammer removal; jammer signal amplitude; least squares synthesis method; nonstationary interference; phase matching; receiver performance; receiver processing capacity; signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio; software-radio architecture; spread-spectrum communications; synthesized signal; time domain; time-frequency distribution synthesis; time-frequency domain; Application software; Correlators; Frequency conversion; Interference; Jamming; Least squares methods; Signal restoration; Signal synthesis; Spread spectrum communication; Time frequency analysis;
Journal_Title :
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on