WO2013044473A1 - Method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems - Google Patents

Method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2013044473A1
WO2013044473A1 PCT/CN2011/080328 CN2011080328W WO2013044473A1 WO 2013044473 A1 WO2013044473 A1 WO 2013044473A1 CN 2011080328 W CN2011080328 W CN 2011080328W WO 2013044473 A1 WO2013044473 A1 WO 2013044473A1
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Prior art keywords
synchronization signals
signal
frequency
number sequence
synchronization
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PCT/CN2011/080328
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French (fr)
Inventor
Fredrik Berggren
Branislav Popovic
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Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
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Application filed by Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. filed Critical Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Priority to CN201180073545.XA priority Critical patent/CN103814560B/en
Priority to EP16184867.6A priority patent/EP3110097B1/en
Priority to CN201610966019.0A priority patent/CN106534027B/en
Priority to EP11872910.2A priority patent/EP2761836B1/en
Priority to PCT/CN2011/080328 priority patent/WO2013044473A1/en
Publication of WO2013044473A1 publication Critical patent/WO2013044473A1/en
Priority to US14/229,263 priority patent/US9356747B2/en
Priority to US15/142,478 priority patent/US9553753B2/en

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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/26Systems using multi-frequency codes
    • H04L27/2601Multicarrier modulation systems
    • H04L27/2647Arrangements specific to the receiver only
    • H04L27/2655Synchronisation arrangements
    • H04L27/2689Link with other circuits, i.e. special connections between synchronisation arrangements and other circuits for achieving synchronisation
    • H04L27/2692Link with other circuits, i.e. special connections between synchronisation arrangements and other circuits for achieving synchronisation with preamble design, i.e. with negotiation of the synchronisation sequence with transmitter or sequence linked to the algorithm used at the receiver
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/26Systems using multi-frequency codes
    • H04L27/2601Multicarrier modulation systems
    • H04L27/2602Signal structure
    • H04L27/261Details of reference signals
    • H04L27/2613Structure of the reference signals
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L5/00Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
    • H04L5/003Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W24/00Supervisory, monitoring or testing arrangements
    • H04W24/02Arrangements for optimising operational condition
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W56/00Synchronisation arrangements
    • H04W56/001Synchronization between nodes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W64/00Locating users or terminals or network equipment for network management purposes, e.g. mobility management
    • H04W64/003Locating users or terminals or network equipment for network management purposes, e.g. mobility management locating network equipment
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L27/00Modulated-carrier systems
    • H04L27/26Systems using multi-frequency codes
    • H04L27/2601Multicarrier modulation systems
    • H04L27/2602Signal structure
    • H04L27/2603Signal structure ensuring backward compatibility with legacy system
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L5/00Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
    • H04L5/003Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
    • H04L5/0048Allocation of pilot signals, i.e. of signals known to the receiver
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L5/00Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
    • H04L5/003Arrangements for allocating sub-channels of the transmission path
    • H04L5/0058Allocation criteria
    • H04L5/0073Allocation arrangements that take into account other cell interferences

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems. Furthermore, the invention also relates to a computer program, a computer program product, a signal processing device, and a receiver device.
  • a fundamental acquisition procedure in a cellular wireless system is the cell search, which is performed by a mobile terminal for obtaining time- and frequency synchronization to a cell in the network and detecting its cell identity.
  • Cell search is enabled by the detection of synchronization signals transmitted from a base station.
  • the cell search is regarded as a procedure demanding much complexity and power in the mobile terminal, since finding synchronization requires correlators (i.e., matched filters) performing complex valued multiplications (due to matching the received signal to a replica signal). It is therefore crucial to design the synchronization signal such that low-complex receiver implementations of the cell searcher can be used.
  • a further objective of the synchronization signal is to enable detection at very low Signal-to- Interference-plus-Noise-Ratios (SINRs).
  • SINRs Signal-to- Interference-plus-Noise-Ratios
  • Low SINRs often occur at the cell edge and the coverage of the cell is implicitly dependent on whether the synchronization signal can be detected.
  • low SINRs may not only occur at distances far from the transmitter.
  • High interference situations may be common in heterogeneous network deployments, i.e., where small low-power cells (e.g. pico cells, femto cells, Home eNodeBs etc.) are deployed at the same carrier frequency as a high-power macro cell and in its coverage region.
  • small low-power cells e.g. pico cells, femto cells, Home eNodeBs etc.
  • the experienced SINRs at the mobile terminal may become much smaller than what is currently seen in homogeneous macro cell deployments. It is therefore a problem to provide synchronization signals that can be detected under severe interference conditions with a dominant interferer, while at the same time exhibit a structure that allows low-complex detectors.
  • system performance can be improved by allowing the mobile terminal (e.g. a User Equipment, UE) to connect to the pico cell, although the received power from the pico cell is smaller than for the macro cell.
  • UE User Equipment
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a heterogenous network deployment, where received signal strength from a macro cell is larger than a received signal strength from a pico cell, if a mobile terminal is located in the cell range expansion region.
  • the macro cell is regarded as a dominant interferer for UEs that are in the range expansion zone. These severe interference situations could be handled for the data channels by coordinated scheduling between the macro and pico cell. However, there are typically no means for interference coordination of the synchronization channels, which makes synchronization a problem.
  • the primary synchronization signal is transmitted on 62 subcarriers; 31 subcarriers directly below and above the DC subcarrier, respectively.
  • synchronization signals from different cells are always overlapping in frequency. This constitutes no major problem for homogeneous network deployments.
  • the prior art system has no means for avoiding the strong interference caused by a synchronization signal from a macro cell colliding with the synchronization signal of the pico cell.
  • Patent documents US7751490, EP2090050 and EP1980030 disclose synchronization signals enabling low-complex receiver implementations.
  • the mapping can thus be described by
  • the object of the present invention is to provide a method which mitigates and/or solves the disadvantages of prior art solutions. More specifically, the invention aims to provide synchronization signals which have good detection performance for low SINR values and which may be detected using low-complex demodulation methods.
  • the objects are achieved with a method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems, said method comprising the steps of:
  • the objects are achieved with a method for transmitting synchronization signals in a wireless communication system, said method comprising the step of:
  • the objects are achieved with a method for synchronization in a wireless communication system, said method comprising the steps of:
  • the invention also relates to a computer program, a computer program product, a signal processing device, and a receiver device.
  • the present invention provides synchronization signals which facilitate good detection performance at low SINRs, and which may be demodulated using low-complex methods.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a heterogeneous network deployment where mobile terminals are connected to a pico cell in the range expansion zone while the received power is stronger from the macro cell;
  • FIG. 2 schematically shows a principal receiver chain for a cell searcher
  • FIG. 3 schematically shows an example of a correlator for low complexity detection
  • FIG. 4 schematically shows pre-processing of an input signal to the correlator by a base band mixer
  • One way to assure that the synchronization signal can be detected at low SINRs is to reduce the interference. Such reduction could be achieved by transmitting synchronization signals from different cells on mutually orthogonal frequency resources. The network could then be planned such that strong interference is avoided. In a heterogeneous deployment, this would ensure that the synchronization signal transmitted from a macro cell does not become interference to a closely located pico cell.
  • the objective is achieved by a synchronization signal that can be located at an arbitrary frequency position (in steps of subcarriers) while comprising signal properties that allow low-complex receivers.
  • the method comprises the steps of:
  • a time domain synchronization signal having properties so as to being detected using low-complex detection methods and which also has good detection performance at low SINRs, e.g. in heterogeneous network deployment scenarios.
  • the following disclosure discusses the above advantageous properties and other aspect of the invention.
  • the integer value m corresponds to a frequency shift of m subcarriers of the synchronization signal.
  • the number sequence may not be punctured at its central element. It follows using equation (3) and the periodicity of the Fourier transform that N-1 N
  • Equation (6) and (7) show that the sequence with root ⁇ can be detected with a filter matched to 3 ⁇ 4 [k] while the sequence with root u can be detected with a filter matched to s u [k] .
  • This can be used in an implementation to reduce complexity, since no new complex multiplications may be needed to for matching the signal to 3 ⁇ 4 [k] once it has been matched to s u [k] .
  • the continuous base-band OFDM signal (excluding the cyclic prefix) can be generated by
  • N the number of subcarriers of the OFDM signal.
  • continuous time-domain signal also features a sort of symmetry as its discrete counterpart (5). Furthermore, the symmetry for complex conjugated sequence pairs is also maintained, since
  • the sample rate in the receiver is often not specified by the radio standards.
  • the synchronization signal occupies only 63 subcarriers, including the DC subcarrier.
  • N corresponds to an appropriately chosen sampling rate at the receiver.
  • synchronization signals according to the invention may be used in 3GPP E-UTRA systems, such as LTE or LTE- Advanced. Preferably as primary synchronization signals in such systems.
  • the present invention further provides a method for synchronization in a wireless communication system.
  • the method comprises the steps of: receiving synchronization signals as described above; demodulating the received synchronization signals; and synchronizing using the demodulated synchronization signals.
  • the following part of the description describes different low-complex embodiments for demodulating synchronization signals according to the invention.
  • the UE acquires frequency synchronization by sequentially adjusting its local oscillator to be in accordance with carrier frequencies supported by the system until the synchronization signal is detected.
  • carrier frequencies LXE are defined on a raster with 100 kHz spacing.
  • a principal receiver chain is illustrated in Fig 2, where the local oscillator (LO) is mixed with the input RF signal.
  • the resulting intermediate RF signal is typically followed by an analog wideband low-pass filter (WB-LPF) for the selection of LTE band.
  • WB-LPF analog wideband low-pass filter
  • the LPF is typically followed by the A/D conversion.
  • a narrow-band low-pass filter (NB-LPF) may also be deployed before the correlator to extract subcarriers carrying the synchronization signal only.
  • the correlator comprises a matched filter which for each sample performs a multiplication of the received signal with the transmitted signal, i.e. a replica signal, in order to integrate signal energy for detecting the correct timing sample.
  • V TM fc in equation (4) is cancelled.
  • the received signal in the correlator will have a central symmetric property, although the transmitted signal is not central symmetric.
  • LTE 3GPP E-UTRA
  • the new synchronization signals defined by the present invention are mapped symmetrically around some non-zero base-band frequency m ⁇ 0 which for the RF signal corresponds to one of the frequencies on the 100 kHz raster, then there is a further advantage of a number sequence with a central element being zero.
  • the base-band frequency m is not one of the frequencies on 100 kHz raster, then the new UEs have to search all the frequencies in an LTE band, what significantly increases implementation complexity, power consumption and average cell search time.
  • the received baseband signal then becomes as in equation (4).
  • the disclosed synchronization signal allows a reduction of the multiplication complexity in the receiver. This can be exemplified as follows.
  • Fig. 3 illustrates a correlator (matched filter with tap delays D) utilizing the pair-wise symmetry of input samples as described. Hence, the pair-wise symmetric input samples multiplied with the complex exponential functions are added prior to multiplication with the replica signal. b) Base-band mixer pre-processing
  • the synchronization can be pre-processed as in Fig. 4.
  • the mixing in Fig. 4 is performed on the discrete base-band signal in order to cancel the complex exponential term WTM k of the received signal.
  • Fig. 5 illustrates the correlator structure where the input comprises the pre- processed signal f [k]. According to Fig. 5 pair- wise symmetric input samples are added prior to multiplication with the replica signal.
  • the input to the correlator may be described as W N m ⁇ k+p [k]
  • r[k] s[k]
  • a correlator can constitute a filter being matched to s[k].
  • the set of pre-processed signal values are
  • WTM is a complex- valued constant (i.e., a phase shift) and only one complex multiplication is needed, i.e., due to
  • any integer valued frequency shift m is applicable to the present invention.
  • the values of m are associated with carrier frequencies specified by the system. That means that H u [0] (which comprises d u [(L— l)/2]) is after the m shifts, mapped to a Fourier frequency coefficient in the set H u , which when used in the RF signal, corresponds to a carrier frequency f c of the system.
  • the disclosed synchronization signal will thus be located on the carrier-frequency raster of the system, e.g., a frequency LXE , which allows that existing cell search implementations could be utilized.
  • the legacy mobile terminal may detect the new synchronization signals and erroneously assume that the central frequency of the new synchronization channel corresponds to the carrier frequency of the LTE system.
  • This problem can be solved by allocating different sequences to new synchronization signals, where new synchronization sequences have low cross-correlation with the legacy synchronization sequences. In that case the legacy UEs will be prevented from erroneously detecting the center frequency of the new synchronization channel because their correlators will not detect the synchronization sequences of new synchronization signals.
  • One way to define new sequences for new synchronization signals is to associate the root indices of Zadoff-Chu sequences with the frequency shifts m.
  • a pico cell broadcasts multiple synchronization signals, positioned at different frequency offsets m .
  • multiple synchronization signals are transmitted, either in different OFDM symbols or within the same OFDM symbol.
  • This is an advantage to legacy terminals that only assume synchronization signals are located around a carrier frequency corresponding to m 0.
  • the values of frequency shift m are not associated with carrier frequencies specified by the system. That means that H u [ ] (which comprises d u [(L— l)/2]) is after the m shifts, mapped to a Fourier frequency coefficient in the set H u , which when used in the RF signal, corresponds to a frequency f c not being used as a carrier frequency of the system.
  • the number sequence is a Zadoff-Chu sequence of length 63 with root indices other than the mentioned above. As described above, this is an advantage to prevent legacy UEs for detecting a new synchronization signal when m ⁇ 0.
  • any method according to the present invention may also be implemented in a computer program, having code means, which when run in a computer causes the computer to execute the steps of the method.
  • the computer program is included in a computer readable medium of a computer program product.
  • the computer readable medium may consist of essentially any memory, such as a ROM (Read-Only Memory), a PROM (Programmable Read-Only Memory), an EPROM (Erasable PROM), a Flash memory, an EEPROM (Electrically Erasable PROM), or a hard disk drive.
  • a receiver device for receiving synchronization signals in a wireless communication system comprises:
  • the above defined devices are preferably comprised in a base station device, and in a mobile station device or a relay device, respectively. Note also that defined devices may be modified according to different embodiments of the methods according to the invention.

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  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)
  • Synchronisation In Digital Transmission Systems (AREA)

Abstract

The present invention relates to a method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems, said method comprising the steps of: defining a number sequence du [n], n = 0,1,..., L— 1 of length L, said number sequence being centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2 of said number sequence, L being an odd positive integer and n denoting element index; mapping said number sequence on a first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients formula (I); generating a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by frequency shifting said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients formula (I) by m shifts, where m is an integer except zero; and transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into a time domain signal. Furthermore, the invention also relates to a computer program, a computer program product, a signal processing device, and a receiver device.

Description

METHOD FOR GENERATING SYNCHRONIZATION SIGNALS FOR WIRELESS
COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Technical field
The present invention relates to a method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems. Furthermore, the invention also relates to a computer program, a computer program product, a signal processing device, and a receiver device.
Background of the Invention
A fundamental acquisition procedure in a cellular wireless system is the cell search, which is performed by a mobile terminal for obtaining time- and frequency synchronization to a cell in the network and detecting its cell identity. Cell search is enabled by the detection of synchronization signals transmitted from a base station.
The cell search is regarded as a procedure demanding much complexity and power in the mobile terminal, since finding synchronization requires correlators (i.e., matched filters) performing complex valued multiplications (due to matching the received signal to a replica signal). It is therefore crucial to design the synchronization signal such that low-complex receiver implementations of the cell searcher can be used.
A further objective of the synchronization signal is to enable detection at very low Signal-to- Interference-plus-Noise-Ratios (SINRs). Low SINRs often occur at the cell edge and the coverage of the cell is implicitly dependent on whether the synchronization signal can be detected. However, low SINRs may not only occur at distances far from the transmitter. High interference situations may be common in heterogeneous network deployments, i.e., where small low-power cells (e.g. pico cells, femto cells, Home eNodeBs etc.) are deployed at the same carrier frequency as a high-power macro cell and in its coverage region.
In heterogeneous network deployments the experienced SINRs at the mobile terminal may become much smaller than what is currently seen in homogeneous macro cell deployments. It is therefore a problem to provide synchronization signals that can be detected under severe interference conditions with a dominant interferer, while at the same time exhibit a structure that allows low-complex detectors. For such deployments, system performance can be improved by allowing the mobile terminal (e.g. a User Equipment, UE) to connect to the pico cell, although the received power from the pico cell is smaller than for the macro cell. In that case, a UE that is connected to a pico cell may experience a stronger signal (i.e., large interference) from the macro cell, which implies that the SINRs at the UE could be much less than 0 dB. This cell -association procedure is sometimes referred to as cell range expansion and can be achieved by adding a bias value in the cell selection criterion. Figure 1 illustrates a heterogenous network deployment, where received signal strength from a macro cell is larger than a received signal strength from a pico cell, if a mobile terminal is located in the cell range expansion region.
The macro cell is regarded as a dominant interferer for UEs that are in the range expansion zone. These severe interference situations could be handled for the data channels by coordinated scheduling between the macro and pico cell. However, there are typically no means for interference coordination of the synchronization channels, which makes synchronization a problem.
For example, in the prior art 3GPP LTE Rel-10 system, the primary synchronization signal is transmitted on 62 subcarriers; 31 subcarriers directly below and above the DC subcarrier, respectively. This applies to all cells in the system. Hence, synchronization signals from different cells are always overlapping in frequency. This constitutes no major problem for homogeneous network deployments. However, for a frame synchronous heterogeneous network deployment, the prior art system has no means for avoiding the strong interference caused by a synchronization signal from a macro cell colliding with the synchronization signal of the pico cell.
Patent documents US7751490, EP2090050 and EP1980030 disclose synchronization signals enabling low-complex receiver implementations. A centrally symmetric number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L— 1, where L is odd, has its central element n = (L— l)/2 punctured. The punctured number sequence is mapped to a set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu [l], l = 0,1, ... , N— 1, such that the Fourier coefficients are symmetric around I = 0, i.e., Hu [l + ] = Hu [l ~ V\ = HU ~ V + ] > where p is an integer and where the last equality follows from the periodicity of the discrete Fourier transform. The mapping can thus be described by
Figure imgf000004_0001
When generating the continuous time-domain base-band signal, the discrete frequency I = 0 corresponds to the DC subcarrier, i.e., the center frequency of the carrier. By the construction in prior art, the discrete time-domain base band signal
Figure imgf000004_0002
becomes centrally symmetric, su [k] = su [N— k], k = 1,2, ... , N— 1. This property can be used in an implementation to reduce the number of complex valued multiplications.
Furthermore, for a complex conjugated sequence pair u and ύ , where [n] = du * [n] , it follows that S [k] = [k] . Also this property can be used in an implementation to reduce the number of complex valued multiplications.
Summary of the Invention
The object of the present invention is to provide a method which mitigates and/or solves the disadvantages of prior art solutions. More specifically, the invention aims to provide synchronization signals which have good detection performance for low SINR values and which may be detected using low-complex demodulation methods.
According to an aspect of the invention, the objects are achieved with a method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems, said method comprising the steps of:
- defining a number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L— 1 of length L, said number sequence being centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2 of said number sequence, L being an odd positive integer and n denoting element index;
- mapping said number sequence on a first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu; - generating a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by frequency shifting said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by m shifts, where m is an integer except zero; and
- transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into a time domain signal.
According to another aspect of the invention, the objects are achieved with a method for transmitting synchronization signals in a wireless communication system, said method comprising the step of:
- transmitting one or more synchronization signals generated according to the invention in a wireless communication system.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, the objects are achieved with a method for synchronization in a wireless communication system, said method comprising the steps of:
- receiving one or more synchronization signals transmitted according to a method for transmitting synchronization signals according to the invention;
- demodulating said one or more synchronization signals; and
- synchronizing using said demodulated one or more synchronization signals.
The invention also relates to a computer program, a computer program product, a signal processing device, and a receiver device.
The present invention provides synchronization signals which facilitate good detection performance at low SINRs, and which may be demodulated using low-complex methods.
Further applications and advantageous of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description.
Brief Description of the Drawings
The appended drawings are intended to clarify and explain different embodiments of the present invention in which: - Figure 1 illustrates a heterogeneous network deployment where mobile terminals are connected to a pico cell in the range expansion zone while the received power is stronger from the macro cell;
- Figure 2 schematically shows a principal receiver chain for a cell searcher;
- Figure 3 schematically shows an example of a correlator for low complexity detection;
- Figure 4 schematically shows pre-processing of an input signal to the correlator by a base band mixer; and
- Figure 5 schematically shows another example of low-complexity detection. Detailed Description of the Invention
One way to assure that the synchronization signal can be detected at low SINRs is to reduce the interference. Such reduction could be achieved by transmitting synchronization signals from different cells on mutually orthogonal frequency resources. The network could then be planned such that strong interference is avoided. In a heterogeneous deployment, this would ensure that the synchronization signal transmitted from a macro cell does not become interference to a closely located pico cell. In this invention, the objective is achieved by a synchronization signal that can be located at an arbitrary frequency position (in steps of subcarriers) while comprising signal properties that allow low-complex receivers.
This is achieved by a method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems according to the present invention. The method comprises the steps of:
- defining a number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L — 1 of length L, said number sequence being centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2 of said number sequence, L being an odd positive integer and n denoting element index;
- mapping said number sequence on a first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu;
- generating a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by frequency shifting said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by m shifts, where m is an integer except zero; and
- transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into a time domain signal. Thereby a time domain synchronization signal is provided having properties so as to being detected using low-complex detection methods and which also has good detection performance at low SINRs, e.g. in heterogeneous network deployment scenarios. The following disclosure discusses the above advantageous properties and other aspect of the invention.
Discrete time-domain base-band synchronization signal
Suppose a discrete time-domain base band signal is obtained (by transformation) as
N-l
l[k] =Hu n\W kn,k = 0,1, ...,N - 1 (1)
Figure imgf000007_0001
for a set of Fourier frequency coefficients Hu [I], I = 0,1, ... , N— 1.
Consider an odd-length number sequence du[n],n = 0,1, ... ,L— 1 , which is centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2, i.e., du[n] = du[L— 1— n]. The number sequence is mapped to the Fourier frequency coefficients according to
Hu[l] = Hu[(l + m)modN] (2) where
L— 1 L— 1
I + I = 0,1,
2
Hu[l] 1 (3)
1 -N +- , 1 = N
o, elsewhere,
and m is an integer value. Hence, a first set of centrally symmetric discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu = { u[l I = 0,1, ...,N— l) is defined and a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu = (Hu[l],l = 0,1, ...,N— 1) is generated by frequency shifting the first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu according to equation (2).
Further, the integer value m corresponds to a frequency shift of m subcarriers of the synchronization signal. Compared to prior art, the number sequence may not be punctured at its central element. It follows using equation (3) and the periodicity of the Fourier transform that N-1 N
Wn kn
n=Q n=l
Figure imgf000008_0001
Hence, su [k] is a centrally symmetric signal, where each sample, except k = 0 , has a symmetric counterpart. It can further be shown from the property of the discrete Fourier transform that su [k] = W™ksu [k]. (4)
Hence, the disclosed synchronization signal comprises a centrally symmetric signal su [k] modulated by a complex-valued exponential function W™k . It can also be shown using (4) and the central symmetry of su [k] that su[N - k] = W„mksu[k] = W„2mksu [k]. (5)
Furthermore, for a complex conjugated sequence pair u and ύ , where [n] = du * [n] , it follows that ¾ [k] = ¾ [k] . Hence, using (4) we obtain
Su lk] = W™ks* [k] = W mksu * [k (6)
From (4)-(6), we can further obtain
[Ν - k] = W^2mk Sil [k] = W„mksi[k] = s^k]. (7)
Equation (6) and (7) show that the sequence with root ύ can be detected with a filter matched to ¾ [k] while the sequence with root u can be detected with a filter matched to su [k] . This can be used in an implementation to reduce complexity, since no new complex multiplications may be needed to for matching the signal to ¾ [k] once it has been matched to su [k] .
The synchronization signal (4) inherits the correlation properties of su [k] which can be realized by considering the periodic auto-correlation function ρ(Δ) = + Δ) mod N]
Figure imgf000009_0001
N-l
^ W™ns [n] W~m(-n+A)s* [(n + Δ) mod N]
n=0
N-l
s [n]s* [(n + Δ) mod N]
n=0
Continuous time domain base-band synchronization signal
Suppose a set of Fourier frequency coefficients are defined as
Figure imgf000009_0002
vo, elsewhere. with
= Hu [ l + m)mod N] . (9)
The continuous base-band OFDM signal (excluding the cyclic prefix) can be generated by
N/2-1
Su it) = 0 ≤ t < = N . Ts (10)
Figure imgf000009_0003
where s is the sampling period, f the subcarrier spacing and N = l/Ts f. Equivalently, N is the number of subcarriers of the OFDM signal. For notational simplicity, it is assumed that N is even and a person skilled in the art may generalize the representation to odd N. In prior art LTE system N = 2048 for Af = 15 kHz. The RF signal is obtained by modulating the base-band OFDM signal such that the DC subcarrier (i.e., frequency k = 0) of the transmitted signal corresponds to the carrier frequency.
From (9) and (10) we further have N/2-1
¾(£) = ^ Hw[fc] . e-^^ . e^^. (11) k = -N/2
Due to the periodicity of the complex sinusoid in equation (9), and the symmetry of the mapping in equation (7), we obtain
Figure imgf000010_0001
N/2
= ei2nm ft■ ^ Hu[k]■ e-^ t
k = -N/2
N/2
7j2nmAft
Figure imgf000010_0002
suit) ε4πΊηΑ^.
In this way we have shown that continuous time-domain signal also features a sort of symmetry as its discrete counterpart (5). Furthermore, the symmetry for complex conjugated sequence pairs is also maintained, since
N/2-1 k=-N/2
N/2-1
ej2nmAft ^ Hu[k] ei2n]i^ft
k = -N/2
Figure imgf000010_0003
we can wnte
N/2-1
u(t) = Hm J2nkAft
k=-N/2
N/2-1
^ H*[fc] · e-'2™ ** · e j2nkAft
k=-N/2 W/2-1
= e -j2nmAft ^ f[^k . e -j2nkAft
k=-N/2
= e-^m^ - s (t) (14)
It is further noted that the sample rate in the receiver is often not specified by the radio standards. In prior art LTE system, the synchronization signal occupies only 63 subcarriers, including the DC subcarrier. Hence the sample rate in the cell searcher could be considerably less than N = 2048 samples per OFDM symbol. In the following receiver embodiments, it is assumed that N corresponds to an appropriately chosen sampling rate at the receiver.
It should be realized from the above disclosure that synchronization signals according to the invention may be used in 3GPP E-UTRA systems, such as LTE or LTE- Advanced. Preferably as primary synchronization signals in such systems.
The present invention further provides a method for synchronization in a wireless communication system. The method comprises the steps of: receiving synchronization signals as described above; demodulating the received synchronization signals; and synchronizing using the demodulated synchronization signals. The following part of the description describes different low-complex embodiments for demodulating synchronization signals according to the invention.
Low-complexity synchronization signal detection/demodulation
In the cell search procedure, the UE acquires frequency synchronization by sequentially adjusting its local oscillator to be in accordance with carrier frequencies supported by the system until the synchronization signal is detected. In the prior art LTE system, carrier frequencies LXE are defined on a raster with 100 kHz spacing. A principal receiver chain is illustrated in Fig 2, where the local oscillator (LO) is mixed with the input RF signal. The resulting intermediate RF signal is typically followed by an analog wideband low-pass filter (WB-LPF) for the selection of LTE band. The LPF is typically followed by the A/D conversion. A narrow-band low-pass filter (NB-LPF) may also be deployed before the correlator to extract subcarriers carrying the synchronization signal only. The correlator comprises a matched filter which for each sample performs a multiplication of the received signal with the transmitted signal, i.e. a replica signal, in order to integrate signal energy for detecting the correct timing sample.
Demodulation with local oscillator frequency fL0 corresponding to fc = fLTE + m · Af
In one embodiment of a receiver method according to the invention, low-complexity synchronization signal detection is facilitated by that the receiver demodulates the received continuous time-domain signal by using a local oscillator frequency that is associated with the discrete frequency fc = LXE + m · Af. For the received sampled base-band signal, this will equivalently imply that the term V ™fc in equation (4) is cancelled. The baseband discrete signal will thus appear as su [k] = su [k] in the receiver. Hence, the received signal in the correlator will have a central symmetric property, although the transmitted signal is not central symmetric. In this embodiment, it is advantageous that the transmitted signal does not contain a modulation symbol on base-band frequency k = m, since the local oscillator of the receiver may create severe distortion at the center frequency of the receiver. Thus in an embodiment of the invention, the number sequence is additionally characterized by that the central element of the number sequence assumes du [(L— l)/2] = 0.
In prior art 3GPP E-UTRA (LTE) system, all synchronization signals are mapped around the LTE carrier frequency, i.e., m = 0, where the carrier frequency LXE can have a number of different possible values, defined by the LTE cellular standard on a raster with 100 kHz spacing. If the new synchronization signals defined by the present invention are mapped symmetrically around some non-zero base-band frequency m≠ 0 which for the RF signal corresponds to one of the frequencies on the 100 kHz raster, then there is a further advantage of a number sequence with a central element being zero. In that case the same synchronization signal detector can be used in the new UEs ( m≠ 0 ) and in legacy UEs (m = 0), by setting the local oscillator in the new UEs to the frequency fc = LXE + m · Af . On the other hand, if the base-band frequency m is not one of the frequencies on 100 kHz raster, then the new UEs have to search all the frequencies in an LTE band, what significantly increases implementation complexity, power consumption and average cell search time.
Demodulation with local oscillator frequency fL0 corresponding to fc = fLTE
In another embodiment of the invention, low-complexity synchronization signal detection is facilitated by that the receiver demodulates the received continuous time-domain signal by using a local oscillator frequency that is the same as one of possible LTE carrier frequencies defined by the LTE standard, i.e., corresponds to the discrete base-band frequency k = 0. The received baseband signal then becomes as in equation (4).
For this kind of RF demodulation the following three preferred embodiments are disclosed for reducing the complexity of the synchronization detection. a) Addition of symmetrical samples prior to multiplication
The disclosed synchronization signal allows a reduction of the multiplication complexity in the receiver. This can be exemplified as follows. Consider the correlation value p(0) =
Figure imgf000013_0001
[fc] l, which represents the output value from a matched filter (correlator) at the correct timing. Due to the central symmetry of su[/c], we can identify the pairs of products in the correlation sum for k = 1,2,■■■> ~ ~ 1* where N is even, using (4) and (5) ru[k]s* [k] + ru [N - k]s* [N - k] = (W^mkru [k] + W™kru [N - k])s* [k].
In right hand side of the above expression the input samples multiplied with the complex exponential functions are added prior to multiplication with the replica signal s£ [k] . A skilled reader can deduce the similar relation for a root index u. An advantage of this representation is that it can use filter coefficients corresponding to ¾[/c], which is already applied in the cell searcher for legacy terminals for detecting synchronization signals at m = 0. An alternative representation is ru[k]s* [k] + ru [N - k]s* [N - k] = (rjfc] + W„2mkru [N - k])s* [k] . which would yield another set of filter coefficients ¾ [k] .
Since the multiplication with W^mk only implies a phase shift, the above expression can be implemented equivalently to 1 complex multiplication. The correlation value p(0) can thus be computed with less than Nmultiplications. Fig. 3 illustrates a correlator (matched filter with tap delays D) utilizing the pair-wise symmetry of input samples as described. Hence, the pair-wise symmetric input samples multiplied with the complex exponential functions are added prior to multiplication with the replica signal. b) Base-band mixer pre-processing
By mixing the received discrete base-band signal with W^mk (i.e. a complex exponential function having a periodicity depending on m) prior to the input of the correlator, the synchronization can be pre-processed as in Fig. 4. The mixing in Fig. 4 is performed on the discrete base-band signal in order to cancel the complex exponential term W™k of the received signal.
If present, the narrow-band low-pass filter for selection of synchronization signal should be applied after the base-band mixer. This is an advantage as it allows using the same filter when detecting a synchronization signal with m≠ 0 and m = 0.
An advantage of this pre-processing is that the correlator could comprise a filter matched to s[k] , which is a centrally symmetric signal according to the prior art in cited patent documents. Fig. 5 illustrates the correlator structure where the input comprises the pre- processed signal f [k]. According to Fig. 5 pair- wise symmetric input samples are added prior to multiplication with the replica signal.
Since the mixer continuously performs a multiplication on the received signal, there is an arbitrary but fixed delay p between the mixer and the received signal. This delay is unknown to the receiver and cannot be compensated for. Taking this effect into account, the input to the correlator may be described as WN m^k+p [k] When r[k] = s[k], the correlation function becomes
Figure imgf000014_0001
Hence, the correlation properties of s[k] are inherited and the low-complex receiver structures of prior art can be utilized. c) Block processing of correlator input
The advantages of the mixer pre-processing could also be achieved by a block processing method. In general, a correlator may take a block of r[k], k = 0,1, ... , N— 1, input samples. Suppose f [k] = W^mkr[k] denotes a pre-processed received signal containing N samples in the z:th block and that the z+ l:th block comprises samples k = Ι, .,. , Ν, which are pre- processed as f [k] = WN m("k 1V[/c], /c = 1, ... , N. When a block comprises the N samples of the synchronization signal r[k] = s[k] = W^slk] , the input to the correlator essentially becomes s[k]. Thus for any such block, a correlator can constitute a filter being matched to s[k].
For the z:th block, the set of pre-processed signal values are
[r[0], Wn m r[l], Wn 2m r[2], ... , W'^171 r[N - 1]} and for the z+ 1 :th block
[r[l], Wn m r[2], W^2m r[3], ... , W'^'1^ r[N]}.
It is thus realized that the pre-processed signal values for z+ l:th block can be obtained from the z:th block, by:
Replacing r [ 0] with r [ 1 ]
Multiplying the remaining signal values in the z:th block by W™
- Inserting W~{N~1 m r[N]
This allows reduction of the implementation complexity of a block since W™ is a complex- valued constant (i.e., a phase shift) and only one complex multiplication is needed, i.e., due to
W- N-1)m r[N]. Frequency shift
Any integer valued frequency shift m is applicable to the present invention. In one embodiment, the values of m are associated with carrier frequencies specified by the system. That means that Hu [0] (which comprises du[(L— l)/2]) is after the m shifts, mapped to a Fourier frequency coefficient in the set Hu, which when used in the RF signal, corresponds to a carrier frequency fc of the system. The disclosed synchronization signal will thus be located on the carrier-frequency raster of the system, e.g., a frequency LXE , which allows that existing cell search implementations could be utilized. In that case, the legacy mobile terminal may detect the new synchronization signals and erroneously assume that the central frequency of the new synchronization channel corresponds to the carrier frequency of the LTE system.
This problem can be solved by allocating different sequences to new synchronization signals, where new synchronization sequences have low cross-correlation with the legacy synchronization sequences. In that case the legacy UEs will be prevented from erroneously detecting the center frequency of the new synchronization channel because their correlators will not detect the synchronization sequences of new synchronization signals. One way to define new sequences for new synchronization signals is to associate the root indices of Zadoff-Chu sequences with the frequency shifts m.
In a heterogeneous network deployment, it might be useful that a pico cell broadcasts multiple synchronization signals, positioned at different frequency offsets m . The synchronization signal detection is typically a problem within the range expansion zone, i.e., where the interference is strong. Terminals being closer to the pico cell than the range expansion zone may be able to detect a synchronization signal from the pico cell that is being transmitted on the same frequency resources as a synchronization signal from the macro cell, i.e., at m = 0. The legacy terminals may only be capable of detecting synchronization signals where m = 0, which could be possible if they are connected to the pico cell but are not in the range expansion zone. It is therefore an advantage to transmit synchronization signals at different frequency locations since it allows both new and legacy terminals to access the pico cell. If there would be no synchronization signal transmitted at frequency m = 0, no legacy terminals could access the pico cell.
In another embodiment, multiple synchronization signals are transmitted, either in different OFDM symbols or within the same OFDM symbol. This is an advantage to legacy terminals that only assume synchronization signals are located around a carrier frequency corresponding to m = 0. Hence, it is disclosed that several values m = m0, m = m1 ... are deployed in different OFDM symbols or within the same OFDM symbol. It is understood that different synchronization signals should not overlap in frequency within an OFDM symbol. The values used m = m0, m = m1 ... may be predetermined or signaled to the receiver.
In yet another embodiment, the values of frequency shift m are not associated with carrier frequencies specified by the system. That means that Hu [ ] (which comprises du [(L— l)/2]) is after the m shifts, mapped to a Fourier frequency coefficient in the set Hu, which when used in the RF signal, corresponds to a frequency fc not being used as a carrier frequency of the system. The disclosed synchronization signal will thus not be located on the carrier- frequency raster of the system. This is an advantage since legacy UEs, i.e., UEs that are only searching for synchronization signals with m = 0, will not be able to detect a synchronization signal with m≠ 0. This prevents such a legacy UE for erroneously detecting the center frequency of the carrier. In that case no new synchronization sequences are needed.
Number sequence
Any complex- or real valued centrally symmetric number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L— 1 is applicable to the present invention. In one embodiment, the number sequence is a Zadoff- Chu sequence of length 63 with root indices u = 25, 29 and 34. This has the advantage that the same correlator could be utilized as in a legacy 3GPP LTE system. However, according to another embodiment, the number sequence is a Zadoff-Chu sequence of length 63 with root indices other than the mentioned above. As described above, this is an advantage to prevent legacy UEs for detecting a new synchronization signal when m≠ 0.
Furthermore, as understood by the person skilled in the art, any method according to the present invention may also be implemented in a computer program, having code means, which when run in a computer causes the computer to execute the steps of the method. The computer program is included in a computer readable medium of a computer program product. The computer readable medium may consist of essentially any memory, such as a ROM (Read-Only Memory), a PROM (Programmable Read-Only Memory), an EPROM (Erasable PROM), a Flash memory, an EEPROM (Electrically Erasable PROM), or a hard disk drive.
Moreover, the methods above may be implemented in suitable devices.
Hence, a signal processing device according to the invention comprises: - means for defining a number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L— 1 of length L, said number sequence being centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2 of said number sequence, L being an odd positive integer and n denoting element index;
- means for mapping said number sequence on a first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu;
- means for generating a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by frequency shifting said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by m shifts, where m is an integer except zero; and
- means for transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into a time domain signal.
While a receiver device for receiving synchronization signals in a wireless communication system according to the invention comprises:
- means for receiving one or more synchronization signals according to the present invention;
- means for demodulating said one or more synchronization signals; and
- means for synchronizing using said demodulated one or more synchronization signals.
The above defined devices are preferably comprised in a base station device, and in a mobile station device or a relay device, respectively. Note also that defined devices may be modified according to different embodiments of the methods according to the invention.
Finally, it should be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but also relates to and incorporates all embodiments within the scope of the appended independent claims.

Claims

1. Method for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems, said method comprising the steps of:
- defining a number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L— 1 with of length L, said number sequence being centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2 of said number sequence, L being an odd positive integer and n denoting element index;
- mapping said number sequence on a first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu;
- generating a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by frequency shifting said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by m shifts, where m is an integer except zero; and
- transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into a time domain signal.
2. Method according to claim 1, wherein said step of transforming comprises:
- transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into discrete or continuous time domain signals.
3. Method according to claim 2, wherein
- said discrete time domain signal is obtained by: su [k] = ∑^ Hu [n]Wn kn , k = 0,1, ... , N - 1, where WN = exp ~~) > j = ~ l, N is a positive integer larger than or equal to L; and
- said continuous time domain signal is obtained by:
¾ (t) =∑fc=_w/2 Hu ik] · ej27TkAft, 0≤ t < j = N · Ts, where Ts is the sampling period and Δί is a subcarrier frequency spacing of said wireless communication systems.
4. Method according to claim 1, wherein said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu is a set of centrally symmetric discrete Fourier frequency coefficients.
5. Method according to claim 4, wherein said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu is obtained by: Hu [l] = [l - +— ] , I = N , N -
Figure imgf000020_0001
elsewhere. where N is a positive integer larger than or equal to L, and 1 = 0, 1 , . ..N-l .
6. Method according to claim 1, wherein said frequency shifting involves m shifts modulo N, where N is a positive integer larger than or equal to L.
7. Method according to claim 6, wherein said frequency shifting is obtained by: Hu ] = Hu [(l + m)mod N] , wherein 1 = 0, 1.. ..N-1.
8. Method according to claim 1, wherein said number sequence fulfils the condition du [(L— l)/2] = 0.
9. Method according to claim 1 or 8, wherein said number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L— 1 is a Zadoff-Chu sequence of length 63 with a root index u equal to 25, 29 or 34.
10. Method according to claim 1 or 8, wherein said number sequence du [n], n =
0,1, ... , L— 1 is a Zadoff-Chu sequence of length 63 with a root index u other than 25, 29 or 34.
11. Method according to claim 1, wherein said number sequence du [n], n =
0,1, ... , L— 1 is defined based on the value of the m shifts.
12. Method according to claim 1, wherein said wireless communication system is an OFDM system, such as a 3GPP E-UTRA system, and the m shifts correspond to a frequency shift of m subcarriers.
13. Method for transmitting synchronization signals in a wireless communication system, said method comprising the step of:
- transmitting one or more synchronization signals generated according to any of claims 1-12 in a wireless communication system.
14. Method according to claim 13, wherein said one or more synchronization signals are used as primary synchronization signals.
15. Method according to claim 13, wherein said wireless communication system is an OFDM system, such as a 3GPP E-UTRA system, employing a plurality of carrier frequencies fc and where m corresponds to a frequency shift of m number of subcarriers.
16. Method according to claim 15, wherein said one or more synchronization signals are transmitted in more than one OFDM symbol, said one or more synchronization signals having different values for m.
17. Method according to claim 15, wherein said one or more synchronization signals are transmitted in the same OFDM symbol, said one or more synchronization signals having different values for m.
18. Method according to claim 15, wherein the m shifts for one synchronization signal is chosen so that Hu [0] of said synchronization signal is mapped onto one of said plurality of carrier frequencies fc.
19. Method according to claim 15, wherein the m shifts for one synchronization signal is chosen so that Hu [0] of said synchronization signal is mapped onto a frequency being different from any of said plurality of carrier frequencies fc.
20. Method according to any of claims 14-19, wherein said method further comprises the step of:
- transmitting at least one further primary synchronization signal, said further primary synchronization signal being defined by and transmitted according to 3GPP E-UTRA.
21. Method for synchronization in a wireless communication system, said method comprising the steps of:
- receiving one or more synchronization signals transmitted according to any of claims 13-20;
- demodulating said one or more synchronization signals; and
- synchronizing using said demodulated one or more synchronization signals.
22. Method according to claim 21, wherein said wireless communication system is an OFDM system employing at least one carrier frequency fc and a plurality of sub-carriers having a frequency spacing equal to Δί.
23. Method according to claim 22, wherein said carrier frequency fc is a carrier frequency for 3GPP E-UTRA systems.
24. Method according to claim 22, wherein said at least one synchronization signal is demodulated using a local oscillator frequency ¾ ) being equal to said carrier frequency fc plus m times said sub-carrier spacing Δί so that fLo = fc + m-Af.
25. Method according to claim 22, wherein said at least one synchronization signal is demodulated using a local oscillator frequency ¾ ) being equal to said carrier frequency fc so that fuo = fc.
26. Method according to claim 25, wherein said step of demodulation comprises:
- adding samples of said received one or more synchronization signals prior to multiplication with a replica signal of the transmitted one or more synchronization signals.
27. Method according to claim 25, wherein said step of demodulation comprises:
- mixing said received one or more synchronization signals with a complex exponential function having a periodicity depending on m prior to multiplication with a replica signal of the transmitted one or more synchronization signals.
28. Method according to claim 25, wherein said step of demodulation comprises:
- block processing said received one or more synchronization signals using a complex exponential function having a periodicity depending on m prior to multiplication with a replica signal of the transmitted one or more synchronization signals.
29. Computer program, characterized in code means, which when run in a computer causes said computer to execute said method according to any of claims 1-28.
30. Computer program product comprising a computer readable medium and a computer program according to claim 29, wherein said computer program is included in the computer readable medium.
31. Signal processing device for generating synchronization signals for wireless communication systems, said signal processing device comprising:
- means for defining a number sequence du [n], n = 0,1, ... , L — 1 of length L, said number sequence being centrally symmetric around the element n = (L— l)/2 of said number sequence, L being an odd positive integer and n denoting element index;
- means for mapping said number sequence on a first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu; - means for generating a second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by frequency shifting said first set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu by m shifts, where m is an integer except zero; and
- means for transforming said second set of discrete Fourier frequency coefficients Hu into a time domain signal.
32. Base station device comprising at least one signal processing device according to claim 31.
33. Receiver device for receiving synchronization signals in a wireless communication system, said receiver device comprising:
- means for receiving one or more synchronization signals transmitted according to any of claims 1-11;
- means for demodulating said one or more synchronization signals; and
- means for synchronizing using said demodulated one or more synchronization signals.
34. Mobile station device or a relay station device comprising at least one receiver device according to claim 33.
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