Institute of Communications Engineering, Tampere University of Technology, P.O. Box 553, Tampere 33101, Finland
Copyright © 2006 Elena Simona Lohan et al. This is an open access article distributed under the
Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
The estimation with high accuracy of the line-of-sight delay is a
prerequisite for all global navigation satellite systems. The
delay locked loops and their enhanced variants are the structures
of choice for the commercial GNSS receivers, but their performance
in severe multipath scenarios is still rather limited. The new
satellite positioning system proposals specify higher code-epoch
lengths compared to the traditional GPS signal and the use of a
new modulation, the binary offset carrier (BOC) modulation,
which triggers new challenges in the delay tracking stage. We
propose and analyze here the use of feedforward delay estimation
techniques in order to improve the accuracy of the delay
estimation in severe multipath scenarios. First, we give an
extensive review of feedforward delay estimation techniques for
CDMA signals in fading channels, by taking into account the impact
of BOC modulation. Second, we extend the techniques previously
proposed by the authors in the context of wideband CDMA delay
estimation (e.g., Teager-Kaiser and the projection onto convex
sets) to the BOC-modulated signals. These techniques are presented
as possible alternatives to the feedback tracking loops. A
particular attention is on the scenarios with closely spaced
paths. We also discuss how these feedforward techniques can be
implemented via DSPs.