System of managing the power emitted by a base station at...

Telecommunications – Transmitter and receiver at separate stations – Plural transmitters or receivers

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C455S436000, C370S318000, C370S331000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06704578

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns a telecommunication system for mobiles and, more particularly, a system for managing the power emitted by a base station at the start of a handover phase.
2. Description of the Related Art
A telecommunication system for mobiles according to the present invention is of the type which has a network of base stations to which the said mobiles can be connected and thus be attached. The mobiles can communicate with the network by means of base stations which each delimit a coverage area generally referred to as a “cell”. When a mobile passes into the coverage of a new cell, a process, referred to in the art as a “handover process”, is used in order that the communication in progress can continue, transparently to the users. To do this, the network has means so that the said mobile connected to at least one so-called initial base station is, during a phase referred to as a handover phase, still connected to the said initial base station or stations and also to another so-called target base station.
Various handover processes are known today. One of them is referred to as “soft” and is used in networks for which the coverage areas of the cells overlap one another. Thus, in this configuration, the mobiles can be in communication at one and the same moment with a number of base stations.
The sole FIGURE depicts a mobile M which is moving (arrows A) from a base station BS
1
towards a base station BS
2
and which illustrates the soft handover process.
All base stations in the network, a fortiori the depicted base stations BS
1
and BS
2
, send marker signals with one and the same power P
TX

marker
which is constant over time. These marker signals are common to all mobiles in the system. There have been depicted the curves of the powers P
RX1

marker
and P
RX2

marker
, received by the mobile M at a respective distance from the base stations BS
1
and BS
2
, of the marker signals respectively sent by the said base stations BS
1
and BS
2
.
The power level of these marker signals received by the mobile M is often used to determine whether this mobile M is situated in the coverage area of each base station.
The handover process may be as follows. The mobile M is initially assumed to be in communication with the base station BS
1
, referred to as the initial base station. On moving towards the base station BS
2
, referred to as the target base station, it will find itself in the area covered by the base station BS
2
. This will be the situation, for example, when the power of the marker signal which it receives from the base station BS
2
becomes greater than that which it receives from the base station BS
1
by a value of x decibels. It then goes into communication with both base stations BS
1
and BS
2
(point marked a). Then, when the power of the marker signal received from the base station BS
1
becomes less than the marker power received from the base station BS
2
by a value y decibels (point marked b), the mobile M abandons the base station BS
1
and is therefore only in communication with the base station BS
2
.
In the area marked I, the mobile is attached only to the base station BS
1
. In the area marked II, the mobile is attached to both the base station BS
1
and the base station BS
2
and is said to be in handover phase. In the area marked III, the mobile is attached only to the base station BS
2
.
A mobile M also receives, from each base station with which it is attached, a user signal, also referred to as a dedicated signal, with a certain received power. For example, in the sole figure, when it is attached to the base station BS
1
, it receives therefrom a received dedicated signal power P
RX1
. Similarly, when it is attached to the base station BS
2
, it receives therefrom a received dedicated signal power P
RX2
.
It should be noted that, in handover phase, it receives the dedicated signals from the base stations BS
1
and BS
2
with a power which is the sum of the received powers P
Rx1
and P
RX2
. The received powers P
Rx1
and P
RX2
are equal to the powers P
TX1
and P
Tx2
, which are respectively emitted by the base stations BS
1
and BS
2
, decreased by the realizations of the attenuations due to the transmission channels respectively between the base stations BS
1
and BS
2
and the mobile M.
In telecommunication systems for mobiles, a mobile which is attached to a base station sends to this base station, besides user signals, power control commands in order that the said base station controls its own transmission power P
TX
so that the power P
RX
received therefrom is equal to a predetermined value. Thus, according to a known embodiment, when the total power received by the mobile M is either too high or too low, the mobile sends a transmission power control command TPC, either for decreasing or increasing power, to all the base stations to which it is attached in order that the said base stations modify their respective dedicated transmission powers to a correct value, generally a predetermined value.
During the handover phase, the ratio of the powers emitted by the different base stations to which the mobile is attached remains constant. However, during this handover phase, it is important that the powers transmitted by all the base stations to which the mobile is attached are equal, so that a smooth transition can take place on entering and leaving the handover phase. This is because, if the power ratio were not equal to one at the moment of entering the handover phase, the result would be a mismatch which would be retained all through the handover process.
Various solutions could be provided to this problem of matching, during the handover phase, the powers emitted by the base stations to which the mobile is attached.
The first consists of providing a power matching loop. Each base station checks its transmission power and sends back its value to a central management unit. At the moment the mobile enters the handover phase, this central management unit controls the base stations so as to match their respective transmission powers.
One variant would consist of removing the calculation of the transmission power to each base station, the latter then having to know the transmission power of the other base stations to which the mobile is attached.
The problem posed by this solution is that the total time for sending back the power value from each base station to the central management unit, in order to calculate the correct power level, and for returning it to the base stations, is long. During this time, it is possible that the quality of the radio channels between the base stations and the mobile has been altered. The power mismatch which can result therefrom can cause halting of the calls in progress.
Another variant would consist of making provision that the initial base station BS
1
to which the mobile is initially attached can measure its own transmission power during a given period, following which it would transmit its value to the target base station BS
2
. The base station BS
2
would then continuously check its own mean transmission power so as to deduce the mismatch between its mean transmission power and that of the other base station BS
1
. However, in this solution, a certain time is necessary for aligning the transmission power of the target base station BS
2
. This time can typically be of the order of that of the transmission of the signalling between the base stations, which can be quite high compared with the time for modifying the behaviour of the channel. With the result that, during this period at least, the transmission power of the target base station BS
2
is not correct.
Another problem resulting from this method is that the alignment of the dedicated power emitted by the target base station is carried out with an old value of the mean dedicated power transmitted by the initial base station. The true value may be completely different, owing to the signalling transmission delay and the rapid change in the realization of the attenuation due to the

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