Abstract

A new algorithm is presented for estimating mobile speed for handoff in hierarchical cellular systems. The proposed algorithm is based on normalized autocorrelation values of received signals to estimate mobile speed; it contains six steps. First, the instantaneous power of the received baseband signal is calculated to remove the offset and data/speech information-bearing signals, while keeping the Doppler information. Second, the calculated power signal is filtered using a low-pass linear phase finite impulse response filter to suppress interference and noise. Third, the filtered power signal is decimated to ease the computational burden, while the decimation factor is properly chosen to avoid aliasing. Fourth, autocorrelation values of the decimated filtered power signals are calculated on shifting by to suppress the slot burst frequency interference. Fifth, the calculated autocorrelation values are normalized to suppress the power fluctuation of the received signals. Finally, the normalized autocorrelation values are compared with thresholds to estimate mobile speed. The simulation results indicate that the new algorithm works very well for both nondispersive channels and dispersive channels to distinguish fast and slow moving mobiles. The method has very low latency, with results being available typically within 1 s after communication is established, and it can report estimation result every second or less. The algorithm has been implemented by software code into Nortel's base-station radios and tested in Nortel's wireless communications labs.

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