A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels

<p/> <p>An efficient method for equalization of downlink CDMA channels is presented. By describing the observed signal in terms of a state-space model, the method employs the Kalman filter (KF) to achieve an unbiased signal estimate satisfying the linear minimum mean-squared error (LMMSE...

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Main Authors: Zhang Jianzhong, Nguyen Hoang, Raghothaman Balaji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2005-01-01
Series:EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/ASP.2005.611
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spelling doaj-39f52eb924f04e989a5990568e0019fd2020-11-24T23:34:35ZengSpringerOpenEURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing1687-61721687-61802005-01-0120055750826A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink ChannelsZhang JianzhongNguyen HoangRaghothaman Balaji<p/> <p>An efficient method for equalization of downlink CDMA channels is presented. By describing the observed signal in terms of a state-space model, the method employs the Kalman filter (KF) to achieve an unbiased signal estimate satisfying the linear minimum mean-squared error (LMMSE) criterion. The state-space model is realized at the symbol and chip levels. With the symbol-level model, the KF is used to estimate the transmitted chips that correspond to each symbol interval; whereas at the chip level, the transmitted chips are estimated individually. The symbol-level KF has a built-in tracking capability that takes advantage of the a priori known scrambling sequence, which renders the transmitted signal nonstationary. The chip-level KF reduces the complexity of the symbol-level KF significantly by ignoring the nonstationarity introduced by scrambling. A simple method for further reducing the KF complexity is also presented. The computational complexity of the proposed technique is analyzed and compared with that of several linear approaches based on finite-impulse response (FIR) filtering. Simulations under realistic channel conditions are carried out which indicate that the KF-based approach is superior to FIR equalizers by <inline-formula><graphic file="1687-6180-2005-750826-i1.gif"/></inline-formula>- <inline-formula><graphic file="1687-6180-2005-750826-i2.gif"/></inline-formula> in error-rate performance.</p>http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/ASP.2005.611Kalman filterCDMAsingle-user detectionoversamplingcolor noisestate-space models
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhang Jianzhong
Nguyen Hoang
Raghothaman Balaji
spellingShingle Zhang Jianzhong
Nguyen Hoang
Raghothaman Balaji
A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels
EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
Kalman filter
CDMA
single-user detection
oversampling
color noise
state-space models
author_facet Zhang Jianzhong
Nguyen Hoang
Raghothaman Balaji
author_sort Zhang Jianzhong
title A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels
title_short A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels
title_full A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels
title_fullStr A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels
title_full_unstemmed A Kalman-Filter Approach to Equalization of CDMA Downlink Channels
title_sort kalman-filter approach to equalization of cdma downlink channels
publisher SpringerOpen
series EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
issn 1687-6172
1687-6180
publishDate 2005-01-01
description <p/> <p>An efficient method for equalization of downlink CDMA channels is presented. By describing the observed signal in terms of a state-space model, the method employs the Kalman filter (KF) to achieve an unbiased signal estimate satisfying the linear minimum mean-squared error (LMMSE) criterion. The state-space model is realized at the symbol and chip levels. With the symbol-level model, the KF is used to estimate the transmitted chips that correspond to each symbol interval; whereas at the chip level, the transmitted chips are estimated individually. The symbol-level KF has a built-in tracking capability that takes advantage of the a priori known scrambling sequence, which renders the transmitted signal nonstationary. The chip-level KF reduces the complexity of the symbol-level KF significantly by ignoring the nonstationarity introduced by scrambling. A simple method for further reducing the KF complexity is also presented. The computational complexity of the proposed technique is analyzed and compared with that of several linear approaches based on finite-impulse response (FIR) filtering. Simulations under realistic channel conditions are carried out which indicate that the KF-based approach is superior to FIR equalizers by <inline-formula><graphic file="1687-6180-2005-750826-i1.gif"/></inline-formula>- <inline-formula><graphic file="1687-6180-2005-750826-i2.gif"/></inline-formula> in error-rate performance.</p>
topic Kalman filter
CDMA
single-user detection
oversampling
color noise
state-space models
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/ASP.2005.611
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