KR101640952B1

5G,4G

Title

METHODS FOR CONTROL SIGNALING FOR WIRELESS SYSTEMS

Application Number:

KR20107022569

Publication Date:

19-07-2016

Current Assignee:

Family ID:

Application Date:

10-03-2009

Declaring Company:

Publication Country:

US

Priority Date:

10-03-2008

Title

METHODS FOR CONTROL SIGNALING FOR WIRELESS SYSTEMS

Application Number:

KR20107022569

Family ID:

Publication Country:

US

Publication Date:

19-07-2016

Application Date:

10-03-2009

Priority Date:

10-03-2008

Current Assignee:

Declaring Company:

Abstract  Abstract

In order to effectively and efficiently provide control information, a broadcast pointer channel (BPCH) is used to identify the type and possibly relative position of the control information being provided in a given frame structure, such as a subframe, frame or superframe have. A subframe (or similar framing entity such as a frame or superframe) may have a BPCH, and a corresponding system control information segment where control information may be located. The system control information segment may have any number of control information blocks, and each existing control information block may correspond to a specific type of control information. The BPCH is used to identify the type of control information present in the corresponding system control information segment, and the relative positions of the various control information as needed or desired.

Note:

The information in blue was extracted from the third parties (Standard Setting Organisation, Espacenet)

The information in grey was provided by the patent holder

The information in purple was extracted from the FrandAvenue

Explicitly disclosed patent:openly and comprehensibly describes all details of the invention in the patent document.

Implicitly disclosed patent:does not explicitly state certain aspects of the invention, but still allows for these to be inferred from the information provided.

Basis patent:The core patent in a family, outlining the fundamental invention from which related patents or applications originate.

Family member:related patents or applications that share a common priority or original filing.