[Ground-station] Baseband => decimation - questions

Ron Economos w6rz at comcast.net
Sun Jan 27 01:07:17 PST 2019


SDR's like the Ettus B2x0, bladeRF and LimeSDR are direct conversion. 
Here's a block diagram of the architecture.

direct conversion

The PLL is tuned to the frequency of interest. The IF is 0 Hz. Each ADC 
runs at the desired sample rate and provides 1/2 the sample rate of 
bandwidth. The analog baseband low-pass filters are set to 1/2 the 
bandwidth. No decimation required.

In fact, the bladeRF has no filtering at all in it's FPGA. If you set 
the baseband analog filters to wider than the desired bandwidth, you can 
see the aliasing (the TX is also direct conversion). The sample rate for 
this OFDM signal was 6.86 MHz.

aliasing

Same signal with the baseband filter set properly to 5.5 MHz (each 
low-pass filter set to 2.75 MHz).

no alias

Ron W6RZ

On 1/26/19 23:51, Zach Leffke via Ground-Station wrote:
>
> I'll attempt to clarify without adding to much noise......I think I'm 
> seeing both sides of this here......Though I'm no DSP expert, so fair 
> warning I might misspeak a bit.
>
> A lot of what has been discussed so far is about down conversion, not 
> decimation.........
>
> The trick is the 'guts' of the SDR, specifically the RFIC and the ADC 
> used.  Say we have an IF of 700 MHz coming out of an LNB.  The upper 
> edge of our signal would be at 705 MHz. According to Nyquist, you 
> would have to sample that IF signal at 1410 Megasamples per second (at 
> least).  Any lower than that, and images of the sampled signal will 
> overlap and corrupt the data (Aliasing).  Say your ADC had 14 
> bits.......that's a lot of data, probably more than most FPGAs can handle.
>
> The trick in the SDR (pick your vendor, I'm staying generic here) is 
> that it has a tunable front end that performs another level of down 
> conversion in the analog domain before sampling (for example, the 
> AD9361 in Ettus B210s, E310s, etc).  This takes the 700 MHz signal 
> down to say 20 MHz (made that number up), with an ADC running at a 
> fixed rate..... say 80 MHz (also made that number up).
>
> At this point, my DSP-fu is weak, but where I'm going with this is 
> that the 80 MHz sampling is real samples, represents 40 MHz of RF 
> bandwidth (Nyquist).  This can be represented as a stream of complex 
> samples (IQ) running at half the rate, though each sample is twice the 
> size, one for I and one for Q .......(Nyquist isn't violated, because 
> even at half the rate, you have two samples, one In-phase, and one 
> Quadrature)......
>
> So now we have a stream at 40 MSPS (complex), spanning from 0 to +40 
> MHz, with our signal camped out at +20 MHz.  So then we tune digitally 
> to center our signal at 0 MHz...aka complex baseband.  Now we have a 
> stream still at 40 MSPS (complex), but spanning from -20 MHz to +20 
> MHz.  Negative frequencies are OK in the complex domain.  Our signal 
> of interest is now centered at 0 MHz, but is spanning from -5 MHz to 
> +5 MHz.
>
> I think what Michelle is getting at is that we don't want to have an 
> FPGA processing a 40 MHz wide stream of data, when we only need to 
> worry about 10 MHz.  Since our signal is centered at 0 MHz, we can 
> start throwing away samples........Decimation. We can toss 3 out of 
> every 4 samples out (decimate by 4, and filter), which leaves us with 
> a 10 MSPS stream of complex samples.  This also has some benefit in 
> that we are also rejecting the noise contributions of those 
> unnecessary samples that we tossed out (linked to the B in kTB).
>
> Everything that was (horribly) described above is handled 'under the 
> hood' by the UHD drivers in Ettus products for example.  When you tell 
> a UHD source block the sample rate you want (usually the 'samp_rate' 
> variable that shows up in the flowgraph) what you are actually telling 
> it is the 'requested' sample rate on the output of the above process.  
> The onboard ADC still runs at the fixed higher rate (80 Mhz in my 
> example), but based on your input into the UHD source block, it will 
> automatically select the right parameters to ensure that after 
> sampling, conversion to complex baseband (including tuning your 
> requested center frequency to 0 MHz), decimation and filtering, that 
> the rate you requested is fed out to the host computer. This is why 
> you have to be careful about selecting sample rates with 
> UHD.........some of you have probably seen the debug output where it 
> warns you that the division of the ADC clock rate by the requested 
> sample rate is not an even integer and to expect 'CIC 
> rolloff'........basically it couldn't cleanly do the decimation you 
> requested (again....something here about the value of half band 
> filters in the FPGA that are part of the conversion to complex 
> baseband and decimation.....sorry for my weak DSP-fu).  You know you 
> got it wrong when you see a 'hump' of spectrum when the spectrum 
> should be 'flat'.
>
> Now we can run that 10 MSPS complex stream of samples through the 
> demodulation process and extract the 'frames of interest' for any 
> particular user........that would be demultiplexing (throw out the 
> frames for everyone else, I only want the frames for me).
>
> I would offer that on the ground side, there is no channelizer in the 
> mix.....you must receive the entire 10 MHz signal to recover the full 
> downlink data stream, since there is only one time multiplexed, 10 MHz 
> wide signal.
>
> On the satellite payload on the other hand....you WILL want a 
> channelizer.  Lets say the uplink is 10 MHz wide, and supports 1000 
> channels, so each 10 kHz wide.  In order to demodulate 1000 channels 
> in parallel, somewhere in there you need to tune 1000 times to center 
> each uplink signal to complex baseband and decimate to 10 ksps 
> (complex).  executing 1000 'tunes' in parallel at the full 10 MSPS 
> rate is very very wasteful........Think of the channelizer as a really 
> efficient way of performing the tuning and decimation so that each 
> output channel of the channelizer is only 10 ksps and it is properly 
> 'centered' on the desired uplink channel.  it will require more 
> horsepower than a single tune and single decimate 'string' but is less 
> processing intensive than 1000 of those strings running in parallel.
>
>
> I didn't mention anything about other sampling tricks (Nyquist zones, 
> and potential spectral inversion issues), or the benefits of 
> oversampling (dynamic range), integer vs float 
> representation.........maybe on another thread one day.
>
> So if you are going to roll your own hardware..........first a lot of 
> downconversion from 10 GHz (maybe an LNB to get to say L-Band or maybe 
> something to get to a 'ham band IF' at 432 or 144).  Thats not 
> enough.  You'll have to then downconvert again to something that can 
> be handled by the selected ADC and whatever clock rate it is running 
> at (Nyquist rules apply here).  Filtering and careful consideration of 
> mixing products will matter!  phase noise of the LOs will matter in 
> all that downconversion.......Also, gain gain gain... will matter to 
> make sure that you are fully exercising the full range of the ADC and 
> not just toggling the the lowest couple of bits  (but not too much 
> gain.....clipping).  Then the complex baseband conversion and 
> decimation and on to demodulation, demultiplexing, etc. etc.......A 
> lot of the above is what is handled 'under the hood' by most of the 
> commercial SDRs out there (i.e. UHD) so that the end user can easily 
> get up and running with the 'more interesting' stuff downstream.........
>
> Hopefully this helped clarify the issue.....sorry if it added more 
> noise (my DSP-fu is weak).  Not sure if I actually answered any 
> questions.......
>
>
> -Zach, KJ4QLP
>
> Research Associate
> Aerospace Systems Lab
> Ted & Karyn Hume Center for National Security & Technology
> Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University
> Work Phone: 540-231-4174
> Cell Phone: 540-808-6305
> On 1/25/2019 7:27 PM, Ron Economos via Ground-Station wrote:
>>
>> Okay. De-multiplexing is a much better and less confusing 
>> terminology. As you stated, decimation is a DSP thing and 
>> channelizing the downlink payload has nothing to do with DSP (all the 
>> DSP has already been down in order to deliver payload packets).
>>
>> Ron W6RZ
>>
>> On 1/25/19 16:17, Michelle Thompson wrote:
>>> To me, decimation is what we do in order to channelize in the payload.
>>>
>>> I don't think that's exactly what I'm being asked about in the 
>>> ground station receiver, though.
>>>
>>> -Michelle W5NYV
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 4:14 PM Ron Economos <w6rz at comcast.net 
>>> <mailto:w6rz at comcast.net>> wrote:
>>>
>>>     I'm not sure we are talking about the same thing yet. So what
>>>     exactly do you expect to decimate and why?
>>>
>>>     Ron W6RZ
>>>
>>>     On 1/25/19 16:07, Michelle Thompson wrote:
>>>>     The beginning of wisdom being the definition of terms and all,
>>>>     it would be good to make sure we're all talking about the same
>>>>     thing.
>>>>
>>>>     So far, I've used LNBs and USRPs for receive, with the LNB
>>>>     doing an IF at 618MHz (LNB-on-a-Stick) and giving reasonable
>>>>     performance.
>>>>
>>>>     Decimation to me is a DSP thing, or used to reduce power
>>>>     consumption when you don't need to sample as high as you can.
>>>>
>>>>     -Michelle W5NYV
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>     On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 3:52 PM Ron Economos via Ground-Station
>>>>     <ground-station at lists.openresearch.institute>
>>>>     <mailto:ground-station at lists.openresearch.institute> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>         The standard IF for DVB-S2 receivers is 950 to 2150 MHz.
>>>>
>>>>         DB6NT was selling a down-converter from 10489-10500 MHz to
>>>>         1129-1140 MHz for P4A.
>>>>
>>>>         https://shop.kuhne-electronic.com/kuhne/en/shop/new/MKU+LNC+10+OSCAR+P4A/?card=1832
>>>>
>>>>         I'm not sure what decimation has to do with receiving
>>>>         DVB-S2. The entire 10 MHz signal needs to be demodulated.
>>>>         Individual baseband frames will be selected for processing,
>>>>         but I call that de-multiplexing.
>>>>
>>>>         Ron W6RZ
>>>>
>>>>         On 1/25/19 15:32, David Vieira via Ground-Station wrote:
>>>>>         Michelle - Thanks for posting.  I'll frame some of the
>>>>>         questions.
>>>>>
>>>>>         Typical 10 GHz terrestrial contesting rigs are Heterodyne;
>>>>>         that is a Mixer works with a Local Oscillator (LO) to take
>>>>>         the RF down to an IF (Intermediate Frequency).
>>>>>         For an SDR, that IF can be digitized by an Analog-Digital
>>>>>         Converter.
>>>>>
>>>>>         The most popular IF for contesting/SSB rigs is 144 MHz.
>>>>>         For a data BW of 10 MHz that may or may not be a fast
>>>>>         enough IF carrier.  If we can digitize and recover the
>>>>>         data, it would allow a lot of re-use of existing equipment.
>>>>>
>>>>>         I've heard suggestions/proposals up to the 1.2 GHz Ham band.
>>>>>         In some sense, the IF carrier could be
>>>>>         144/220/440/915/1200 MHz, or even any Non-Ham frequency in
>>>>>         between.
>>>>>
>>>>>         There are a lot of proof of existence designs for a 10 GHz
>>>>>         Mixed down to an IF; and lots of off the shelf ADC
>>>>>         dev-boards. (catch me off thread for details).
>>>>>
>>>>>         Some questions I have are:
>>>>>         ---from an FPGA side of the SDR, what data rate(s) can the
>>>>>         FPGA absorb in to a decimator?
>>>>>
>>>>>         Must we decide upfront on a single frequency; or
>>>>>         preferably allow flexibility in the RF front end design
>>>>>         (ie, Mixer, PLL and Local Oscl hardware choices) by
>>>>>         allowing a wide and programmable variety of ADC and
>>>>>         decimation rates?
>>>>>
>>>>>         {This is where RF and Digital folks must communicate
>>>>>         across walls.}  ;-)
>>>>>
>>>>>         Comments welcome.
>>>>>
>>>>>         regards,
>>>>>         David
>>>>>         KI6CLA
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>         On Friday, January 25, 2019, 2:41:54 PM PST, Michelle
>>>>>         Thompson via Ground-Station
>>>>>         <ground-station at lists.openresearch.institute>
>>>>>         <mailto:ground-station at lists.openresearch.institute> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>         While we are striving to enable all sorts of wonderful
>>>>>         designs by putting prototypes into GNU Radio, a central
>>>>>         goal is to design our own hardware.
>>>>>
>>>>>         We've had a lot of progress on the protocol and algorithm
>>>>>         front (GSE, LDPC, some of the polyphase).
>>>>>
>>>>>         Some fundamental decisions about our own hardware need to
>>>>>         be made.
>>>>>
>>>>>         When we receive, we expect to have to decimate. This is
>>>>>         because we are receiving at a relatively high frequency
>>>>>         (10GHz).
>>>>>
>>>>>         Our bandwidth is (up to) 10MHz. For DVB-S2/X, we fix our
>>>>>         sampling rate, depending on what bandwidth we want to
>>>>>         support. We have a lot of freedom here.
>>>>>
>>>>>         Picking the right frequencies for the receive chain is
>>>>>         therefore important.
>>>>>
>>>>>         What are our options?
>>>>>
>>>>>         What options make the best sense?
>>>>>
>>>>>         I'd like to build and test as soon as possible, so let's
>>>>>         get some discussion going.
>>>>>
>>>>>         -Michelle W5NYV
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>         _______________________________________________
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>>>>>
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>>>>         _______________________________________________
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>>
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