WO2009065012A1 - System and method for locating umts user equipment using measurement reports - Google Patents
System and method for locating umts user equipment using measurement reports Download PDFInfo
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- WO2009065012A1 WO2009065012A1 PCT/US2008/083594 US2008083594W WO2009065012A1 WO 2009065012 A1 WO2009065012 A1 WO 2009065012A1 US 2008083594 W US2008083594 W US 2008083594W WO 2009065012 A1 WO2009065012 A1 WO 2009065012A1
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- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 title claims abstract description 86
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 title claims abstract description 64
- 238000004891 communication Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 35
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- 230000007774 longterm Effects 0.000 claims description 5
- 238000010295 mobile communication Methods 0.000 claims description 5
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Classifications
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04W—WIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
- H04W64/00—Locating users or terminals or network equipment for network management purposes, e.g. mobility management
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S19/00—Satellite radio beacon positioning systems; Determining position, velocity or attitude using signals transmitted by such systems
- G01S19/38—Determining a navigation solution using signals transmitted by a satellite radio beacon positioning system
- G01S19/39—Determining a navigation solution using signals transmitted by a satellite radio beacon positioning system the satellite radio beacon positioning system transmitting time-stamped messages, e.g. GPS [Global Positioning System], GLONASS [Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System] or GALILEO
- G01S19/42—Determining position
- G01S19/45—Determining position by combining measurements of signals from the satellite radio beacon positioning system with a supplementary measurement
- G01S19/46—Determining position by combining measurements of signals from the satellite radio beacon positioning system with a supplementary measurement the supplementary measurement being of a radio-wave signal type
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- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01S—RADIO DIRECTION-FINDING; RADIO NAVIGATION; DETERMINING DISTANCE OR VELOCITY BY USE OF RADIO WAVES; LOCATING OR PRESENCE-DETECTING BY USE OF THE REFLECTION OR RERADIATION OF RADIO WAVES; ANALOGOUS ARRANGEMENTS USING OTHER WAVES
- G01S5/00—Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more direction or position line determinations; Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more distance determinations
- G01S5/02—Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more direction or position line determinations; Position-fixing by co-ordinating two or more distance determinations using radio waves
- G01S5/10—Position of receiver fixed by co-ordinating a plurality of position lines defined by path-difference measurements, e.g. omega or decca systems
Definitions
- GSM Global System for Mobile Communication
- TDMA Time Division Multiple Access
- CDMA Code Division Multiple Access
- OFDMA Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access
- UMTS Universal Mobile Telecommunications System
- Examples of such applications may include, but are not limited to, GSM positioning and assisted global position system (“A-GPS”) positioning.
- A-GPS adaptable UE may acquire and measure signals from a number of satellites to obtain an accurate estimate of the UE's current geographic position.
- GPS- based solutions may offer excellent accuracy, but GPS-based solutions generally suffer from yield issues in indoor environments or in environments that provide a poor line of sight to the open sky in which to best receive GPS satellite transmissions. Furthermore, embedding GPS chipsets into UE may also add an associated cost to the manufacturing of the UE and an associated cost to A-GPS functionality in the respective Communications network. Further, some organizations are hesitant to offer a positioning method solely based upon the availability of a satellite network controlled by the United States government.
- the 3GPP UMTS standard outlines several methods for location including Cell-ID, A-GPS, Observed Time Difference of Arrival ("OTDOA"), and Uplink Time Difference of Arrival (“U-TDOA”).
- Cell-ID generally is the simplest method which provides coarse positioning of mobile devices based on a known location of the coverage area centroid of each base station sector.
- A-GPS is a straightforward implementation for network and handset manufacturers due to their legacy in CDMA2000 networks.
- U-TDOA is also a straightforward technique for those skilled in the art and has been widely deployed for other air standards.
- OTDOA is confronted with significant implementation challenges for network carriers, due to the fact that the base station timing relationships must be known, or measured, for this technique to be viable.
- LMUs base station Location Measurement Units
- NSUs Network Synchronization Units
- IPDL Idle Period Downlink
- the UMTS standard offers alternative location solutions for UE location.
- OTDOA technologies with or without IPDL, have been developed and integrated into the UMTS standard as optional features to enable location of UEs.
- UMTS carriers have been reluctant to adopt these technologies because carriers had not initially requested these optional features in most UE devices.
- concern may exist regarding the impact OTDOA may have on the operation of a communications network including call quality and network capacity. Because widespread adoption of OTDOA may require modifications in both the base stations and mobile stations, network providers are generally more interested in a solution that operates with existing mobile devices and base stations.
- Embodiments of the present subject matter therefore provide a novel method and system to derive OTDOA information from the existing mobile devices and base stations utilizing messages typically used for normal operation of the mobile device.
- measurement report messages e.g., network measurement reports
- UMTS mobile devices report these messages to a base station for proper operation.
- These messages contain the Connection Frame Number ("CFN") - System Frame Number (“SFN”) information between serving and neighbor nodes, such as, but not limited to, base stations, base station sectors, cells, etc.
- CFN Connection Frame Number
- Embodiments of the present subject matter may also derive a neighboring node's SFN-SFN OTD from this information.
- OTDOAs of the neighboring node downlink may be determined.
- Embodiments of the present subject matter may therefore make it possible to determine downlink OTDOA values for mobile devices that do not support the OTDOA feature through the exploitation of network measurement reports that are generally not intended for location determination.
- an embodiment of the present subject matter provides a method for estimating a location of a wireless device.
- the method comprises the steps of determining an OTDOA based solely on signals received from plural nodes and determining the OTDOA using information received from a network measurement report.
- Another embodiment of the present subject matter provides a method for estimating a location of a wireless device.
- the method comprises the steps of determining an OTDOA based solely on signals received from plural nodes and from signals received from a satellite navigation system and determining the OTDOA using information received from a network measurement report.
- a further embodiment of the present subject matter provides a method for estimating a location of a wireless device receiving signals from a plurality of nodes of a communication system.
- the method comprises the steps of determining a first value based on a network timing characteristic for one of the nodes and determining a second value based on a network measurement report characteristic.
- An OTDOA hyperbola based on the first and second values may be determined, and a location of the wireless device estimated as a function of the OTDOA hyperbola.
- An additional embodiment of the present subject matter provides a method for estimating a location of a wireless device receiving signals from a serving node, a first neighboring node, and a second neighboring node, where each node is a node of a communication system.
- the method comprises the steps of determining a first value based on a first network timing characteristic for the first neighboring node and determining a second value based on a second network timing characteristic for the second neighboring node.
- a third value may be determined based on a third network timing characteristic for the serving node, and a fourth value may be determined based on a first network measurement report characteristic.
- a fifth value may he determined based on a second network measurement report characteristic, and an OTDOA hyperbola calculated based on at least one of the first, second, third, fourth, or fifth values.
- a location of the wireless device may then be estimated as a function of the OTDOA hyperbola.
- Alternative embodiments of the present subject matter may calculate the OTDOA hyperbola by calculating a difference between the first and second values, calculating a difference between the first and third value, or calculating a difference between the fourth and fifth values.
- Yet another embodiment of the present subject matter may calculate the OTDOA hyperbola by calculating a first OTDOA hyperbola based on at least one of the first or second values, and at least on one of the fourth or fifth values, and calculating a second OTDOA hyperbola based on at least one of the first or third values, and on the fourth value.
- Another embodiment of the present subject matter provides a system for estimating a location of a wireless device receiving signals from a plurality of nodes of a communication system.
- the system may comprise circuitry for determining a first value based on a network timing characteristic for one of the nodes, and circuitry for determining a second value based on a network measurement report characteristic.
- the system may further comprise circuitry for calculating an OTDOA hyperbola based on the first and second values, and circuitry for estimating a location of the wireless device as a function of the OTDOA.
- Figure 1 is an illustration of a wireless communications network according to an embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Figure 2 is an illustration of timing relationships according to an embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Figures 3 and 4 are illustrations of location determination using three CFN-SFN measurements according to embodiments of the present subject matter.
- Figure 5 is an algorithm according to one embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Figure 6 is an algorithm according to a further embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Figure 7 is an algorithm according to another embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Figure 8 is an algorithm according to yet another embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Figure 9 is a schematic illustration of a communications system according to an embodiment of the present subject matter.
- Embodiments of the present subject matter may provide several methods to derive timing information.
- the positions of either the same mobile device or other mobile devices may be determined completely, or partly, from calculated hyperbolas, from observed time differences ("OTDs"), or from other values.
- This aspect of the present subject matter provides that location capability may be available to non- A-GPS handsets in a network and that high volume mobile device location may be easily computed through existing network measurement reports without consuming the time, battery, and/or network capacity associated with A-GPS position estimation. The latter is a sought after requirement for enhanced network optimization utilizing geo-coded measurements, as well as for security applications requiring frequent position updates for all active users in a network. Another aspect of the present subject matter may also provide an accurate fallback location method when other methods, such as A-GPS, fail. It is anticipated that A-GPS yield will be poor in areas where open-sky conditions do not exist, e.g., indoors and urban environments.
- A-GPS is designed to improve yield in such conditions, many scenarios exist in where A-GPS may not provide enough gain over conventional GPS to produce a successful A-GPS fix.
- timing relationships may tend to drift over time as a function of oscillator characteristics utilized in respective base stations. This drift must be accounted for when utilizing these methods, either through periodic updating of the estimated base station time relationships (base station timing offsets or "BSTOs") or through known means to track and predict timing relationships via prediction methods based on past measurement timing trends.
- Exemplary means of prediction are well-known in the industry and are a manageable problem to those skilled in the art, and will thus not be the subject of further discussion herein.
- OTDs generally define a set of handset based measurements known in the 3GPP standard such as System Frame Number "SFN-SFN" Type 1 and/or Type 2. These measurements are generally the observed time difference of two nodes such as base station cells or sectors and differ primarily in the timing resolution of the measurements. For example, with Type 1, a mobile device measures the timing difference between the Primary Common Control Physical Channels ("P-CCPCH") of cell 1 and cell 2. Type 1 is generally available on a CELL_FACH connection. While a soft handover cannot be performed while on a CELLJFACH connection, the network may request the mobile device to measure the timing difference between cell 1 and cell 2.
- P-CCPCH Primary Common Control Physical Channels
- a Measurement Control Message may be sent to the mobile device on the Forward Access Channel ("FACH"), and the mobile device's measurement results are returned on the Reverse Access Channel (“RACH”).
- FACH Forward Access Channel
- RACH Reverse Access Channel
- the mobile device measures the timing difference between the Common Pilot Channels ("CPICH") of cell 1 and cell 2.
- CPICH Common Pilot Channels
- Type 2 is applicable to both CELLJ)CH and CELL_FACH connections. With either connection type, if there is power in cell 2, the mobile may measure the timing difference between the two cells.
- the mobile device may measure OTDs while in soft handover with cells 1 and 2.
- SFN-Connection Frame Number Another set of handset based measurements known in the 3GPP standard is SFN-Connection Frame Number (“CFN"). These measurements refer to the observed time difference between the connection to a current serving base station cell and some set of handset-measurable, neighboring cells or sectors.
- One solution to obtain a cell or node's SFN timing may be to synchronize the respective base stations with GPS or other comparable techniques. If network carriers find this option justifiable, then network synchronization units ('TSfSUs") may not be necessary.
- 'TSfSUs network synchronization units
- the techniques described in co-pending U.S. Application No. 11/749,095 and co-pending U.S. Application No. 11/749,101, both filed May 15, 2007, the entirety of each incorporated herein by reference, may be utilized. While an NSU based method is described below, such an example should not in any way limit the scope of the claims appended herewith.
- One NSU based solution may provide a GPS trained NSU at one or more base stations within a communications network.
- the NSU may have knowledge of the co-located site's scrambling code and may also continuously estimate the timing of the downlink frame marker.
- chip offset (0-38399) information of the rounded frame and chip offset term in the network measurement report absolute SFN timing within 256 frames may not be required. Therefore, knowledge of frame timing markers (having a period of 38400 chips (10 ms)) may generally be adequate for this purpose.
- SFN timing information may be maintained in a timing bank to provide accurate timing relationships of neighbor SFNs at appropriate measurement reporting times.
- embodiments of the present subject matter employed in OFDMA based systems utilize sampling time, T s , as the time unit.
- the timing offset would be a sample offset rather than a chip offset. Therefore, chip offset, timing offset, sample offset may be utilized interchangeably throughout the present disclosure and the use of one term without the others should not in any way limit the scope of the claims appended herewith.
- embodiments of the present subject matter are not directly dependent of SFN, these certain embodiments may be employed in systems operating under the Long Term Evolution ("LTE") standard, by way of a non-limiting example, and frame offset or frame marker offset would be equally applicable thereto. Therefore, SFN, frame offset, and frame marker offset may be utilized interchangeably throughout the present disclosure and the use of one term without the others should not in any way limit the scope of the claims appended herewith.
- LTE Long Term Evolution
- Another embodiment of the present subject matter may employ a sparse deployment of NSUs to reduce hardware deployment cost and track SFN timing.
- a GPS trained NSU preferably within line of sight of one or more base stations and positioned at a known location, may measure the timing of several scrambling codes associated with one or more neighboring cells or nodes. With knowledge of the precise location of the base stations and the NSU, SFN timing at the neighboring sites may then be determined. Further, as some of the downlink signals may be detected at multiple NSUs, multipath may also be resolved by selecting the earliest SFN timing of a base station.
- Multiples of 256 chips timing offset between different sectors of a base station may assist in identifying the scrambling code group of a base station.
- the modulo 256 chip timing offset characteristics may assist in determining the SFN timing for co-located sectors if the timing of only one sector is known. This latter technique may, of course, be utilized for sparse NSU deployments.
- the sparse NSU deployment approach may be useful in locating unknown base stations. For example, where the location of one or more base stations is not readily available from the carrier, the downlink of a particular base station may be detected at multiple NSU sites, and the base station may then be located with the downlink TDOA information.
- frame offset and chip offset of the neighboring nodes or cells may be generally reported in a measurement report such as a network measurement report.
- the chip offset, T m may generally be required for OTDOA computation.
- a shift of 38400 chips may be added or subtracted to align the frame markers as necessary.
- embodiments of the present subject matter employed in OFDMA based systems may utilize sampling time, T 8 , as an appropriate time unit.
- User equipment (“UE") Rx-Tx time difference may generally be defined as the difference in time between the UE uplink dedicated physical control channel ("UL DPCCH”) frame transmission and the first detected path (in time) of the downlink dedicated physical channel (“DL DPCH”) or fractional dedicated physical channel (“F-DPCH”) frame from the measured radio link.
- UL DPCCH UE uplink dedicated physical control channel
- DL DPCH downlink dedicated physical channel
- F-DPCH fractional dedicated physical channel
- FIG. 1 is an illustration of an exemplary wireless communications network according to an embodiment of the present subject matter.
- the network may be a Global System for Mobile Communication (“GSM”) network, a Time Division Multiple Access (“TDMA”) network, Code Division Multiple Access (“CDMA”) network, a UMTS network, an Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (“OFMDA”) network, a Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (“WiMax”) network, a WiFi network, networks utilizing Evolution-Data Optimized (“EDVO”), CDMA2000 network, 1 times Radio Transmission Technology (“IxRTT”), Long Term Evolution (“LTE”) standards or another equivalent network.
- GSM Global System for Mobile Communication
- TDMA Time Division Multiple Access
- CDMA Code Division Multiple Access
- OFD Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access
- WiMax Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access
- WiFi Wireless Fidelity
- EDVO Evolution-Data Optimized
- CDMA2000 Code Division Multiple Access
- IxRTT Radio Transmission Technology
- LTE Long Term Evolution
- LMU Location measurement units
- NSUs 115 may be dispersed throughout the system or subsystem reception area. NSUs 115 may be integrated with one or more base stations 102-106 or may be independent of a base station 102-106 and may be sparsely deployed through the network 100.
- the wireless network 100 serves mobile stations, UE or devices 120, 122 within reception range of at least one of the base stations 102-106.
- Mobile stations 120, 122 may include cellular telephones, text messaging devices, computers, portable computers, vehicle locating devices, vehicle security devices, communication devices, wireless transceivers or other devices with a wireless communications interface.
- Base station transceivers 102-106 may be operably connected to a central entity or central network unit 130.
- the central entity 130 may be a base station controller ("BSC") in a base station subsystem (“BSS”), a Radio Network Controller (“RNC”) in a Radio Access Network (“RAN”), or, for GSM, General Packet Radio Service (“GPRS”) or UMTS system, a serving mobile location center (“SMLC”) or an equivalent.
- BSC base station controller
- BSS base station subsystem
- RNC Radio Network Controller
- RAN Radio Access Network
- GSM Global System for Mobile Communications
- GPRS General Packet Radio Service
- UMTS serving mobile location center
- connection from each base station to a BSC, SMLC or other central network entity may employ a direct transmission link, e.g., a wired connection, microwave link, Ethernet connection, and the like, or may be employed by one or more intermediate entities, e.g., an intermediate BSC in the case of a connection from a BTS to an SMLC for GSM.
- a direct transmission link e.g., a wired connection, microwave link, Ethernet connection, and the like
- intermediate entities e.g., an intermediate BSC in the case of a connection from a BTS to an SMLC for GSM.
- Each mobile station 120, 122 may periodically measure the transmission timing difference between pairs of base stations 102-106 and/or receive network measurement reports from the network 100. For example, a mobile station 120 may measure the difference in transmission timing for communication from its serving base station 102 and from one or more neighboring base stations, e.g., 106 and/or 103. Either the mobile station or the base station may remove differences attributed primarily to propagation delays between the mobile station and base station antennas to produce a timing difference, determining timing relationships, and/or determine other values or characteristics.
- FIG. 2 is an illustration of timing relationships according to an embodiment of the present subject matter.
- timing relationships 200 between an exemplary mobile device or a UE and one or more nodes or cells are shown.
- T ⁇ x g FN2 202 represents the SFN 2 transmit time measured by an NSU.
- T TXSFNI 204 represents the SFNi transmit time measured by an NSU.
- T TXCFN 206 represents the CFN transmit time measured by an NSU.
- TU E T X — To 212 represents the nominal DL DPCH timing generally referred to as DL DPCH nom .
- T RXSFN2 208 represents the time at the beginning of the second neighbor cell or node 220 primary common control physical channel ("P-CCPCH") frame received most recently in time before the time instant T UETX — T 0 212 at the UE 250.
- T RXSFNI 210 represents the time at the beginning of the first neighbor cell or node 230 P-CCPCH frame received most recently in time before the time instant T ⁇ JETX — To 212 at the UE 250.
- T UETX 214 represents the time when the UE 250 transmits an UL DPCH.
- T pn2 260 represents the one way propagation delay from the second neighbor node or cell 220 to the UE 250. It follows that T pnl 262 represents the one way propagation delay from the first neighbor node or cell 230 to the UE 250. Accordingly, T pr 268 represents the one way propagation delay from the reference node or cell 240, such as a serving node or cell, to the UE 250.
- T ml 266 represents the chip offset or difference between T RXSFNI 210 and DL DPCH nom .
- T n ⁇ 264 represents the chip offset or difference between T RXSFN2 208 and DL DPCH ⁇ om .
- T ml 266 and T m2 264 generally provide a range from 0 to 38399 chips.
- T 0 270 represents the nominal difference between the first received DPCH finger and T UEXX 214 at the UE 250.
- T 0 270 may be a constant of 1024 chips
- ⁇ 260 represents the first received DL DPCH fmger relative to DL DPCH ⁇ om .
- T TxSFm - T UE ⁇ x T pnl + T ml + T 0 (2)
- T mFN2 - T UETx T pn2 + T mX + T 0 (3)
- Equation (3) Equation (3)
- T pn2 -T p ⁇ (T 1x ⁇ 2 - T TxSm ⁇ ) + (T ml - T 1112 ) (4)
- Equation 4 generally represents a hyperbola between the first and second neighboring nodes or cells 220, 230.
- T TXSFN2 202 and T TXSFN! 204 may be measured by an NSU, and T ml 266 and T m2 264 may be obtained from a network measurement report.
- Equation (2) Equation (1)
- T p ⁇ - T pr (T 1x ⁇ 1 - T RCm ) + (a - T ml ) (5)
- Equation 5 generally represents a hyperbola between the reference or serving node or cell 240 and the first neighboring node or cell 230.
- T TXSFNI 204 and T TXCFN 206 may be measured by an NSU, and T ml 266 may be obtained from a network measurement report, ⁇ 270 may be unknown, but is likely to be close to zero.
- the UE 250 is in synchronization with the serving cell 240, the UE Rx- Tx time difference is 1024 chips and ⁇ 270 is zero.
- the synchronization requirement for the UE 250 generally may maintain ⁇ 270 within ⁇ 1.5 chips. However, right after handoff, this value may sometimes be as high as ⁇ 148 chips.
- the UE 250 may be required to adjust ⁇ 270 at a rate of 1 A chip per 200 ms. Therefore, right after handover, the UE 250 may take up to 118.4 seconds to adjust ⁇ 270.
- drive tests in an exemplary UMTS network have revealed that, at any given instant, the most likely value of ⁇ 270 is zero.
- timing offset between nodes may be measured and appropriately subtracted from the respective computation described above.
- an NSU or timing measurement unit TMU
- another embodiment may deploy a timing bank that utilizes measurement reports from a GPS enabled mobile device to track the base station drift.
- FIGS 3 and 4 are illustrations of location determination using three CFN-SFN measurements according to embodiments of the present subject matter.
- an exemplary location technique of a UE according to embodiments of the present subject matter was conducted utilizing a sparse NSU deployment in a live network.
- a first OTDOA 310 was determined as a function of values from a first node 301 and a second node 302.
- a second OTDOA 320 was determined as a function of values from the first node 301 and a third node 303.
- An estimated location of the UE was determined utilizing Matlab 312 and compared with the actual location 316 and GCS locations 314 of the UE.
- a GCS may estimate the best possible location with an iterative process represented by the GCS locations 314. These GCS locations 314 tend to converge toward the actual location 316 as the iteration progresses. In the instance that the GCS locations do not move significantly form one iteration to the next, the iteration may be considered to have converged and this location estimate may be identified as a final GCS location.
- a first OTDOA 410 was determined as a function of values from a first node 401 and a second node 402.
- a second OTDOA 420 was determined as a function of values from the first node 401 and a third node 403.
- An estimated location of the UE was determined utilizing Matlab 412 and compared with the actual location 416 and GCS locations 414 of the UE.
- a GCS may estimate the best possible location with an iterative process represented by the GCS locations 414. These GCS locations 414 tend to converge toward the actual location 416 as the iteration progresses. In the instance that the GCS locations do not move significantly from one iteration to the next, the iteration may be considered to have converged and this location estimate may be identified as a final GCS location.
- FIG. 5 is an algorithm according to one embodiment of the present subject matter. With reference to Figure 5, a method for estimating a location of a wireless device 500 is illustrated.
- an OTDOA may be determined based solely on signals received from plural nodes and at block 520, the OTDOA may be determined using information received from a network measurement report. In one embodiment, this information may comprise a first value determined from a chip offset value.
- the determination of the OTDOA may include using a second value determined from an SFN from one of the nodes.
- the plural nodes may include a serving node and a neighboring node.
- the determination of the OTDOA may include utilizing a second value determined from a difference between a CFN of the serving node and a SFN of the neighboring node.
- a determination of the OTDOA may include using a second value determined from a difference between a SFN of the first neighboring node and a SFN of the second neighboring node.
- the nodes may be, but are not limited to, base stations, base station sectors, and combinations thereof.
- FIG. 6 is an algorithm according to a further embodiment of the present subject matter.
- a method for estimating a location of a wireless device 600 is illustrated.
- an OTDOA may be determined based solely on signals received from plural nodes and from signals received from a satellite navigation system.
- the OTDOA may be determined using information received from a network measurement report.
- the nodes may be, but are not limited to, base stations, base station sectors, and combinations thereof.
- an exemplary satellite navigation system may be, but is not limited to, Global Positioning System (“GPS"), Galileo, Global Navigation Satellite System (“GLONASS”), and Quasi-Zenith Satellite System (“QZSS”).
- GPS Global Positioning System
- GLONASS Global Navigation Satellite System
- QZSS Quasi-Zenith Satellite System
- Figure 7 is an algorithm according to another embodiment of the present subject matter.
- a method for estimating a location of a wireless device receiving signals from a plurality of nodes of a communication system 700 is illustrated.
- An exemplary wireless device may be, but are not limited to, a cellular device, text messaging device, computer, portable computer, vehicle locating device, vehicle security device, communication device, and wireless transceiver.
- exemplary nodes may be base stations, base station sectors, and combinations thereof. Of course, the nodes may not be synchronized or may be synchronized as a function of information received from a satellite signal, or synchronized as a function of information transmitted from a component of the system.
- An exemplary component may be, but is not limited to, an NSU.
- an exemplary communication system may be a UMTS network, OFDMA network WiMax network, GSM network, WiFi network, CDMA network and the systems may operate under a standard such as, but not limited to, IS-95, EDVO, CDMA2000, LTE and IxRTT.
- a first value may be determined based on a network timing characteristic for one of the nodes.
- the network timing characteristic may be a SFN.
- a second value may be determined based on a network measurement report characteristic.
- the network measurement report characteristic may be a chip offset value.
- the estimation of the location of the wireless device may include determining a third value such as, but not limited to, a round trip time ("RTT") value, a cell identification value, a signal strength value, and combinations thereof.
- a third value such as, but not limited to, a round trip time ("RTT") value, a cell identification value, a signal strength value, and combinations thereof.
- Figure 8 is an algorithm according to another embodiment of the present subject matter. With reference to Figure 8, a method for estimating a location of a wireless device receiving signals from a serving node, a first neighboring node, and a second neighboring node, where each node is a node of a communication system 800, is illustrated.
- An exemplary wireless device may be, but is not limited to, a cellular device, text messaging device, computer, portable computer, vehicle locating device, vehicle security device, communication device, and wireless transceiver.
- exemplary nodes may be base stations, base station sectors, and combinations thereof.
- the nodes may not be synchronized or may be synchronized as a function of information received from a satellite signal, or synchronized as a function of information transmitted from a component of the system.
- An exemplary component may be, but is not limited to, an NSU.
- an exemplary communication system may be a UMTS network, WiMax network, OFDMA network, GSM network, WiFi network, CDMA network and the systems may operate under a standard such as, but not limited to, IS-95, EDVO, CDMA2000, LTE, and IxRTT.
- a first value may be determined based upon a first network timing characteristic for the first neighboring node and at block 820, a second value may be determined based on a second network timing characteristic for the second neighboring node.
- a third value may be determined based on a third network timing characteristic for the serving node at block 830, and a fourth value determined based on a first network measurement report characteristic at block 840.
- a fifth value may be determined based on a second network measurement report characteristic.
- the first network timing characteristic may be a SFN, the second network timing characteristic a SFN, and the third network timing characteristic a CFN.
- the first network measurement report characteristic may be a chip offset between the serving node and the first neighboring node and the second network measurement report characteristic may be a chip offset between the serving node and the second neighboring node.
- An OTDOA hyperbola may then be calculated based on at least one of the first, second, third, fourth, or fifth values at block 860, and at block 870 a location of the wireless device estimated as a function of the OTDOA hyperbola.
- the calculation of the OTDOA hyperbola may include calculating a difference between the first and second values.
- the calculation of the OTDOA hyperbola may include calculating a difference between the first and third values.
- the calculation of the OTDOA hyperbola may also include calculating a difference between the fourth and fifth values.
- the calculation of the OTDOA hyperbola may include calculating a first OTDOA hyperbola based on at least one of the first or second values, and at least on one of the fourth or fifth values at block 868, and calculating a second OTDOA hyperbola based on at least one of the first or third values, and on the fourth value at block 869.
- the estimation of the location of the wireless device may also include determining another value such as, but not limited to, an RTT value, a cell identification value, a signal strength value, and combinations thereof.
- FIG. 9 is an illustration of a communications system according to an embodiment of the present subject matter.
- a system 900 is illustrated for estimating a location of a wireless device receiving signals from a plurality of nodes of a communication system.
- An exemplary wireless device may be, but is not limited to, a cellular device, text messaging device, computer, portable computer, vehicle locating device, vehicle security device, communication device, and wireless transceiver.
- the system 900 may be a UMTS network, WiMax network, GSM network, OFDMA network, WiFi network, or CDMA network and may operate under a standard such as, but not limited to, IS-95, EDVO, LTE, CDMA2000, and IxRTT.
- the system may comprise circuitry for determining a first value based on a network timing characteristic for one of the nodes 910 and circuitry for determining a second value based on a network measurement report characteristic 920.
- An exemplary network timing characteristic may be a SFN.
- An exemplary network measurement report characteristic may be a chip offset value.
- An exemplary node may be a base station, base station sector, or combinations thereof. The nodes may be unsynchronized or may be synchronized as a function of information received from a network source or satellite signal.
- the system may further comprise circuitry for calculating an OTDOA hyperbola based on the first and second values 930 and circuitry for estimating a location of the wireless device as a function of the OTDOA 940. While not shown, the system 900 may also include an NSU.
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- Remote Sensing (AREA)
- Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
- Position Fixing By Use Of Radio Waves (AREA)
Abstract
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Priority Applications (4)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| AU2008322574A AU2008322574A1 (en) | 2007-11-15 | 2008-11-14 | System and method for locating UMTS user equipment using measurement reports |
| ES201050010A ES2377088A1 (en) | 2007-11-15 | 2008-11-14 | System and method for locating umts user equipment using measurement reports |
| GB1007808.7A GB2466904B (en) | 2007-11-15 | 2008-11-14 | System and method for locating UMTS user equipment using measurement reports |
| CA2705759A CA2705759A1 (en) | 2007-11-15 | 2008-11-14 | System and method for locating umts user equipment using measurement reports |
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| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US99641207P | 2007-11-15 | 2007-11-15 | |
| US60/996,412 | 2007-11-15 | ||
| US12/104,250 | 2008-04-16 | ||
| US12/104,250 US8447319B2 (en) | 2007-11-15 | 2008-04-16 | System and method for locating UMTS user equipment using measurement reports |
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| WO2009065012A1 true WO2009065012A1 (en) | 2009-05-22 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US2008/083594 WO2009065012A1 (en) | 2007-11-15 | 2008-11-14 | System and method for locating umts user equipment using measurement reports |
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| Country | Link |
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| WO (1) | WO2009065012A1 (en) |
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