Simplified high frequency tuner and tuning method
DCFirst Claim
1. A method for tuning high frequency signals, the method comprising:
- (a) using a local oscillator coarse-tunable in steps of size S, generating a first local oscillator signal at a selected frequency above a lower high frequency spectrum of interest and below an upper high frequency spectrum of interest; and
(b) at the selected local oscillator frequency, switching between;
(1) providing spectrum coverage within the lower high frequency spectrum of interest and not the upper high frequency spectrum of interest; and
(2) providing spectrum coverage within the upper high frequency spectrum of interest and not the lower high frequency spectrum of interest.
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Abstract
An RF tuner and tuning method employs analog quadrature mixing with a coarse-stepwise tunable local oscillator to a near-baseband passband region, followed by A/D conversion of the I and Q signals, correction of phase, group delay, and amplitude errors, image rejection, and translation to baseband by (1) fixed frequency translation, (2) stepwise channelized translation, or (3) essentially continuously variable tuning over a given digital tuning range. The near-baseband passband region is sized and located such that alternating image rejection provides non-redundant and complete tuning coverage of a desired high frequency spectrum with a local oscillator step size equal to about twice the digital tuning range or about twice the number of channels digitally stepwise tunable times the channel width, effectively doubling the typical local oscillator step size. The digital tuning is preferably performed by a continuously variable bandpass decimating filter with aliasing to within RD of baseband, where RD is the filter'"'"'s output sampling rate, followed by fine-shifting to baseband by digital complex mixing. Demodulation is then accomplished according to signal type.
Image rejection and phase error and gain correction are preferably performed with a modified type III Hilbert transform pair with 90°±CF phase change and variable gain. The near-baseband passband is preferably centered at R/4 where R is the sampling rate entering the Hilbert transform.
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Citations
17 Claims
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1. A method for tuning high frequency signals, the method comprising:
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(a) using a local oscillator coarse-tunable in steps of size S, generating a first local oscillator signal at a selected frequency above a lower high frequency spectrum of interest and below an upper high frequency spectrum of interest; and
(b) at the selected local oscillator frequency, switching between;
(1) providing spectrum coverage within the lower high frequency spectrum of interest and not the upper high frequency spectrum of interest; and
(2) providing spectrum coverage within the upper high frequency spectrum of interest and not the lower high frequency spectrum of interest. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
(a) each edge of the lower and upper high frequency spectra of interest nearest the local oscillator signal is separated from the local oscillator signal by a frequency F1-FA, wherein FA is given frequency adjustment;
(b) each edge of the lower and upper high frequency spectra of interest farthest from the local oscillator signal is separated from the local oscillator signal by a frequency F2+FA; and
(c) S=2(F2−
F1).
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5. The method of claim 4 wherein F1=k(F2−
- F1) where k is a positive integer
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6. The method of claim 5 further comprising switching the local oscillator signal from the first frequency to a second frequency, wherein the second frequency is one local oscillator step S away from the first frequency.
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7. A method for tuning a signal from a channelized spectrum having a predetermined channel spacing, the method comprising
(a) mixing a signal of interest having a predetermined maximum bandwidth with a first local oscillator signal; - wherein
(b) the first local oscillator signal has a frequency that (1) is an integer multiple of the channel spacing and (2) is selected to frequency translate the signal of interest to within a near-baseband passband whose lower edge is spaced from DC by at least about the maximum bandwidth of the signal of interest;
whereby problems associated with 1/f noise, DC offsets, and self-mixing products are avoided or substantially diminished. - View Dependent Claims (8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14)
(a) the signal of interest lies within one of an upper high frequency spectrum of interest and a lower high frequency spectrum of interest; and
(b) the method further comprises providing spectrum coverage within one of the high frequency spectra of interest and not the other.
- wherein
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12. The method of claim 11 further comprising switching between:
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(a) providing spectrum coverage within the lower high frequency spectrum of interest and not the upper high frequency spectrum of interest; and
(b) providing spectrum coverage within the upper high frequency spectrum of interest and not the lower high frequency spectrum of interest.
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13. The method of claim 7 wherein the spacing of the lower edge of the near-baseband passband from DC is greater than the passband'"'"'s width.
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14. The method of claim 13 wherein the spacing of the lower edge of the near-baseband passband from DC is about twice the passband'"'"'s width.
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15. Apparatus for tuning, from a channelized spectrum having a predetermined channel spacing, a signal of interest having a predetermined maximum bandwidth, the apparatus comprising:
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(a) a local oscillator configured to generate a local oscillator signal at a frequency that is an integer multiple of the channel spacing; and
(b) a mixer responsive to the local oscillator signal and the signal of interest, wherein the mixer frequency translates the signal of interest;
wherein(c) the frequency-translated signal of interest falls within a near-baseband passband spaced from DC by a frequency offset of at least about the maximum bandwidth of the signal of interest;
whereby problems associated with 1/f noise, DC offsets, and self-mixing products are avoided or substantially diminished. - View Dependent Claims (16, 17)
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Specification