Telecommunications – Receiver or analog modulated signal frequency converter – Plural receivers
Reexamination Certificate
1999-08-11
2002-02-12
Legree, Tracy (Department: 2681)
Telecommunications
Receiver or analog modulated signal frequency converter
Plural receivers
C455S112000, C455S118000, C455S147000, C455S209000, C455S216000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06347219
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a transmission system and a transmission/reception system to be used for radio communications, and a local oscillator to be used in the same.
2. Description of the Related Art
The system to be used in the field of radio communications is generally equipped with a reception circuit, in which the frequency of a received signal is lowered into an intermediate frequency signal by frequency converting means and is then demodulated, and a transmission circuit in which the intermediate frequency signal is modulated and then converted into a transmission frequency by frequency converting means and is transmitted.
The two above frequency converting means to be used respectively in the reception circuit and the transmission circuit converts an input signal of a frequency fr into an output signal of a frequency fi by mixing it with a local oscillator output signal of a frequency f
1
. At this time, the difference between the frequency fr of the input signal and the frequency f
1
 of the local oscillator output signal is the frequency fi of the output signal. Here, the input signal is the received signal in the reception circuit and the intermediate frequency signal in the transmission circuit. On the other hand, the output signal is the intermediate frequency signal in the reception circuit and the transmitted signal in the transmission circuit.
Now when the received signal of the frequency fr is converted in the reception circuit into the intermediate frequency signal of the frequency fi, a signal component of a frequency fg, located on the opposite side of the frequency spectrum from the received signal with respect to the frequency f
1
 of the local oscillator output signal, is also converted likewise as the intermediate frequency signal. This signal component is called “image frequency”, and interferes with the desired signal.
The image frequency fg or the frequency component signal, located on the opposite side from the received signal with respect to f
1
, will be described in the following. When the frequency fr of the received signal is higher than the frequency f
1
 of the local oscillator output signal (that is, fr>f
1
), more specifically, the frequency fg of the image frequency is expressed by fg=f
1
−(fr−f
1
). When the frequency fr of the received signal is lower than the frequency f
1
 of the local oscillator output signal (that is, fr<f
1
), on the contrary, the frequency fg of the image frequency is expressed by fg=f
1
+(f
1
−fr)
In order to avoid the interference caused by such image frequency, it is necessary for the system to filter the image frequency component signal out of the received signal at a stage before the received signal is converted into the intermediate frequency signal.
When the frequency f
1
 of the local oscillator output signal and the frequency fr of the received signal are extremely close to each other, however, a filter having minute passing functionality is required, with such strict design specification, that it becomes difficult to realize. In order to eliminate this disadvantage, there has been known in the prior art the double conversion type system in which the passing functionality requirment of the filter is loosened by performing the frequency conversion two times. The system is advantageous not only in that the filter can be realized relatively easily but also in that the output frequency of the local oscillator and the frequency of the transmitted signal do not come close to each other so that the influences of the transmitted signal upon the local oscillator are reduced, thus stabilizing the characteristics of the local oscillator.
FIG. 8
 shows one example of the system which was conceived by us but not realized by us to be already well known in the art. This system is constructed to include a reception circuit 
102
, a transmission circuit 
103
, a first local oscillator 
130
 and a second local oscillator 
131
.
The reception circuit 
102
 is equipped with band-pass filters 
101
 and 
106
, an amplifier 
104
 for amplifying a received signal, frequency converters 
105
 and 
107
.
The transmission circuit 
103
 is equipped with a modulator 
110
, a frequency converter 
109
 and an amplifier 
108
 for amplifying a transmitted signal.
The local oscillators 
130
 and 
131
 are each constructed of a frequency synthesizer.
The local oscillator 
130
 is equipped with a voltage-controlled oscillator 
111
, a frequency divider 
112
, a variable frequency divider 
113
, a phase comparator 
115
 and a loop filter 
116
. The local oscillator 
131
 is equipped with a voltage-controlled oscillator 
117
, a frequency divider 
118
, a variable frequency divider 
119
, a phase comparator 
121
 and a loop filter 
122
.
The local oscillator 
130
 stabilizes the frequency by dividing the oscillatory frequency of the oscillator 
111
 with the dividers 
112
 and 
113
, by making comparison with the phase of a reference signal using the phase comparator 
115
, and by feeding the comparison result to the oscillator 
111
 through a phase-locked loop [which is composed of the frequency divider 
112
, the variable frequency divider 
113
, the phase comparator 
115
 and the loop filter 
116
 in that order].
The local oscillator 
131
 also functions to stabilize the frequency by dividing the oscillatory frequency of the oscillator 
117
 by the frequency divider 
118
 and the variable frequency divider 
119
, by making a comparison with the phase of a reference signal by the phase comparator 
121
, and by feeding the comparison result to the oscillator 
117
 through a phase-locked loop [which is composed of the frequency divider 
118
, the variable frequency divider 
119
, the phase comparator 
121
 and the loop filter 
122
 in that order].
Here will be described the actions of this system.
At time of reseption, the received signal, as received by an antenna 
99
, is sent to the receiving circuit 
102
 through a transmit-receive switch 
100
. This received signal is filtered to remove unnecessary frequency component signals by the band-pass filter 
101
 of the reception circuit 
102
 and is amplified by the amplifier 
104
 and converted into a first intermediate frequency signal by the frequency converter 
105
. In this case, the frequency converter 
105
 converts the received signal into the first intermediate frequency signal by mixing it with the output signal of the local oscillator 
130
.
The first intermediate frequency signal is filtered to remove the frequency component signals (the noise components) other than the desired intermediate frequency component signal by the filter 
106
 and is frequency-converted into a second intermediate frequency signal by the frequency converter 
107
. In this case, the frequency converter 
107
 converts the first intermediate frequency signal into the second intermediate frequency signal by mixing it with the output signal of the local oscillator 
131
. Finally, the second intermediate frequency signal is outputted to the demodulator (not shown).
At time of transmitting, the output signal of the second local oscillator 
131
 is inputted to and modulated by the modulator 
110
 and is then converted into a transmission frequency signal by the frequency converter 
109
. In this case, the frequency converter 
109
 converts the output signal of the modulator 
110
 into the transmission frequency signal by mixing it with the output signal of the local oscillator 
130
. This transmission frequency signal is amplified by the amplifier 
108
 and is fed to the antenna 
99
 through the switch 
100
.
Such a system is required to have two local oscillators such as the local oscillators 
130
 and 
131
, so that its construction is complicated raising the cost.
Here, the prior art that has succeeded in eliminating the defects of the system is exemplified firstly as disclosed in Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application Nos. 4-87424 and 4-53302.
The first prior art example is equip
Adachi Hisashi
Kosugi Hiroaki
Nakamura Toshiaki
Ohta Ikuo
Takinami Koji
Davis Temica M.
Jacobson & Holman PLLC
Legree Tracy
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