Abstract:
The present invention concerns a method for determining a power of at least one crosspolar interferer in a frame received by a receiver comprising at least a first and a second receive antennas detecting a first and a second polarization, the frame being transmitted from a satellite transmitter comprising at least a first and a second transmit antennas, the first transmit antenna being used for transferring signal representative of the frames to the receiver on the first polarization, the second transmit antenna being used for transferring signal to another receiver using the same frequency and the second polarization. The method comprises the steps of: —obtaining the antenna gains between the satellite transmitter and the receiver, —estimating a value of the atmospheric attenuation between the satellite transmitter and the receiver, a crosspolar attenuation, the channels between the first and second transmit antennas and the receiver, —estimating the power of the at least one interferer from the obtained antennas gains and estimations.

Description:
TECHNICAL FIELD 
       [0001]    The present invention relates generally to a method and a device for determining a power of at least one crosspolar interferer in a frame received by a receiver. 
       BACKGROUND ART 
       [0002]    In satellite communication systems, multibeam satellites are used for increasing the system capacity. In order to improve the frequency reuse factor without significantly increasing the interference, adjacent beams usually make use of the same frequency with different polarizations. In the adjacent beams, independent signals may be transmitted onto the same frequency band by means of two orthogonal polarizations, like for example horizontal and vertical polarizations. Impairments appear when the polarized waveform travels through the troposphere. Besides waveform attenuation, rain and ice depolarization effects are also present and the orthogonality may be lost, which leads to crosstalk between the two polarizations. 
         [0003]    The severity of this effect depends on the operating frequency, atmospheric conditions, correct antenna calibration/alignment, etc. 
         [0004]    Crosspolar interference causes performance degradation for the users able to receive both signals. 
         [0005]    Mitigation techniques may be employed in order to reduce crosspolar interference. Many such techniques already exist in the literature, for example, joint minimum mean square error detection, with or without successive interference cancellation, turbo receivers. 
         [0006]    The existence and the nature of the interferer need to be known in order for the mitigation techniques to be efficient. 
       SUMMARY OF INVENTION 
     Technical Problem 
       [0007]    Transmissions from a satellite to receivers on different polarizations are usually not coordinated. For a given receiver, the useful and the interfering signal frames may be not aligned, i.e. frames have different start/end positions in the time plane and they potentially occupy different bandwidths, pilot positions are different between the interfering frames, etc. 
       Solution to Problem 
       [0008]    The present invention aims at determining, in received signals, if crosspolar interference mitigation needs to be performed. To that end, the present invention concerns a method for determining a power of at least one crosspolar interferer in a frame received by a receiver comprising at least a first and a second receive antennas detecting a first and a second polarization, the frame being transmitted from a satellite transmitter comprising at least a first and a second transmit antennas, the first transmit antenna being used for transferring signal representative of the frames to the receiver on the first polarization, the second transmit antenna being used for transferring signal to another receiver using the same frequency and the second polarization, characterized in that the method comprises the steps of:
       obtaining the antenna gains between the satellite transmitter and the receiver,   estimating an atmospheric attenuation between the satellite transmitter and the receiver,   estimating a crosspolar attenuation,   estimating the channel between the first transmit antenna and the receiver taking into account that the channel is static during the transfer of the frame,   estimating the channel between the second transmit antenna and the receiver from the antenna gain between the second transmit antenna and the receiver and from the atmospheric attenuation,   estimating the power of the at least one interferer from the obtained antennas gains and estimations.       
 
         [0015]    The present invention concerns also a device for determining a power of at least one crosspolar interferer in a frame received by a receiver comprising at least a first and a second receive antennas detecting a first and a second polarization, the frame being transmitted from a satellite transmitter comprising at least a first and a second transmit antennas, the first transmit antenna being used for transferring signal representative of the frames to the receiver on the first polarization, the second transmit antenna being used for transferring signal to another receiver using the same frequency and the second polarization, characterized in that the device comprises:
       means for obtaining the antenna gains between the satellite transmitter and the receiver,   means for estimating an atmospheric attenuation between the satellite transmitter and the receiver,   means for estimating a crosspolar attenuation,   means for estimating the channel between the first transmit antenna and the receiver taking into account that the channel is static during the transfer of the frame,   estimating the channel between the second transmit antenna and the receiver from the antenna gain between the second transmit antenna and the receiver and from the atmospheric attenuation,   means for estimating the power of the at least one interferer from the obtained antennas gains and estimations.       
 
         [0022]    Thus, the receiver is able to implement interference mitigation schemes. 
         [0023]    According to a particular feature, the antenna gains between the satellite transmitter and the receiver are obtained from information related to the location of the receiver, related to the satellite transmitter and related to the receiver antenna gains. 
         [0024]    Thus, antenna gains can be obtained at the receiver. 
         [0025]    According to a particular feature, the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation is computed based on signals received by the receiver through the first receive antenna on pilot symbol positions in the frame transferred by the satellite transmitter through the first transmit antenna. 
         [0026]    Thus, the atmospheric attenuation can be estimated at the receiver. 
         [0027]    According to a particular feature, the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation is determined according to the following formula: 
         [0000]        {tilde over (b)}=E{z*y   1 ′}/( a   1   E{|z|   2 })
 
         [0000]    where E{.} is the mean value computed on at most all the pilot symbol positions in the frame, z denotes pilot symbols, * denotes the complex conjugate, y 1 ′ is the signal received by the receiver through the first receive antenna on pilot symbol positions in the frame transferred by the satellite transmitter through the first transmit antenna, and a 1  is the antenna gain between the first transmit antenna and the first receive antenna. 
         [0028]    Thus, the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation can be computed based on received signals and on known pilot sequence and pilot symbol positions. 
         [0029]    According to a particular feature, the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation is determined according to the following formula: 
         [0000]    
       
      
       {tilde over (b)}={tilde over (h)} 
       1 
       /a 
       1  
      
     
         [0030]    where a 1  is the antenna gain between the first transmit antenna and the first receive antenna and {tilde over (h)} 1  is the estimated value of the channel between the first transmit antenna and the receiver. 
         [0031]    Thus, the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation can be computed based on classical channel estimation methods. 
         [0032]    According to a particular feature, the estimated value of the crosspolar attenuation is computed based on the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation. 
         [0033]    Thus, the estimated value of the crosspolar attenuation can be computed without prior knowledge of the parameters of the crosspolar interferer. 
         [0034]    According to a particular feature, the estimated crosspolar attenuation is 
         [0000]        Ã=E{z*y   2 ′}/( a   1   {tilde over (b)}E{|z|   2 })
 
         [0035]    where y 2 ′ is the signal received by the receiver through the second receive antenna on pilot symbol positions in the frame transferred by the satellite transmitter through the first transmit antenna. 
         [0036]    Thus, the estimated value of the crosspolar attenuation can be computed based on received signals and prior estimations. 
         [0037]    According to a particular feature, the estimated crosspolar attenuation is 
         [0000]        Ã=E{z*y   2   ′}/E{z*y   1 ′}
 
         [0038]    Or Ã=E{z*y 2 ′}/({tilde over (h)} 1 E{|z| 2 }) 
         [0039]    where y 2 ′ is the signal received by the receiver through the second receive antenna on pilot symbol positions in the frame transferred by the satellite transmitter through the first transmit antenna. 
         [0040]    Thus, the estimated value of the crosspolar attenuation can be computed based only on received signals. 
         [0041]    According to a particular feature, the estimated interferer power is 
         [0000]    
       
         
           
             
               
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         [0042]    where a 2  is the antenna gain between the second transmit antenna and the second receive antenna, the averaging function E{.} operates over several subcarriers/time slots of the frame during which the nature of the interference does not change and σ n   2  is the variance of additive white Gaussian noise on the antennas of the receiver. 
         [0043]    Thus, the receiver is able to estimate the power of a crosspolar interferer without any prior knowledge of the interferer&#39;s parameters (e.g. modulation and coding scheme, pilot positions, pilot sequence . . . ). 
         [0000]      {tilde over (σ)} s     2     2 =( E{|y   1   ′−a   1   {tilde over (b)}z|   2   }−E{|y′   2   −a   1   {tilde over (b)}Ãz|   2 })/(| a   2   {tilde over (b)}Ã|   2   −|a   2   {tilde over (b)}|   2 )
 
         [0044]    where a 2  is the antenna gain between the second transmit antenna and the second receive antenna, the averaging function E{.} operates over several subcarriers/time slots during which the nature of the interference does not change. 
         [0045]    Thus, the receiver is able to estimate the power of a crosspolar interferer without any prior knowledge of the interferer&#39;s parameters or of the additive white Gaussian noise on the antennas of the receiver. 
         [0046]    According to a particular feature, the estimated value of the channel between the second transmit antenna and the receiver {tilde over (h)} 2  is estimated by computing: 
         [0000]      {tilde over (h)} 2 =a 2 {tilde over (b)} 
         [0047]    where a 2  is the antenna gain between the second transmit antenna and the second receive antenna and {tilde over (b)} is the estimated value of the atmospheric attenuation. 
         [0048]    Thus, based on the particular nature of the channel between the satellite and the receiver Rec, the present invention is able to estimate the quality of the interfering channel, without prior knowledge of the interferer and without any interference mitigation schemes implemented at the transmitter side. 
         [0049]    According to a particular feature, the method comprises further steps of:
       checking the reliability of the estimated interferer power,   implementing interference mitigation techniques if the estimated interferer power is reliable.       
 
         [0052]    Thus, complexity is reduced by implementing interference mitigation only when the interferer is reliably estimated. 
         [0053]    According to still another aspect, the present invention concerns computer programs which can be directly loadable into a programmable device, comprising instructions or portions of code for implementing the steps of the method according to the invention, when said computer programs are executed on a programmable device. 
         [0054]    Since the features and advantages relating to the computer programs are the same as those set out above related to the method and device according to the invention, they will not be repeated here. 
         [0055]    The characteristics of the invention will emerge more clearly from a reading of the following description of example embodiments, the said description being produced with reference to the accompanying drawings, among which: 
     
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
         [0056]      FIG. 1  represents a multi-beam transmission performed by a satellite. 
           [0057]      FIG. 2  is a diagram representing the architecture of a receiver in which the present invention is implemented. 
           [0058]      FIG. 3  represents an example of a crosspolar interferer frame overlapping in the time and frequency planes with the useful data frame at the receiver side. 
           [0059]      FIG. 4  represents an algorithm executed by the receiver Rec according to the present invention. 
       
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS 
       [0060]      FIG. 1  represents a multi-beam transmission performed by a satellite. 
         [0061]    In the example of  FIG. 1 , a satellite Sat performs a multi-beam transmission on two different frequency bands using different polarizations. 
         [0062]    The beams filed with vertical solid lines are on a first frequency band and at a first polarization, the beams filed with vertical dotted lines are on a second frequency band and at the first polarization, the beams filed with horizontal solid lines are on the second frequency band and at the second polarization and the beams filed with horizontal dotted lines are on the first frequency band and at the second polarization. 
         [0063]    When beams are overlapping and use the same frequency band with different polarizations and impairments appear when the polarized waveform travels through the troposphere, the orthogonality may be lost, which leads to crosstalk between the two polarizations. Crosspolar interference causes performance degradation at the receiver side. 
         [0064]    According to the example of  FIG. 1 , the area Int is a zone wherein beams use the same frequency band with different polarizations and are overlapping. 
         [0065]    According to the invention, a receiver Rec, not shown in  FIG. 1 :
       obtains the antenna gains between the satellite transmitter and the receiver,   estimates an atmospheric attenuation between the satellite transmitter and the receiver taking into account that the atmospheric attenuation is quasi static and dependent on atmospheric conditions in the area the receiver is located,   estimates a crosspolar attenuation,   estimates the channel between the first antenna and the receiver taking into account that the channel is static during the transfer of the frame,   estimates the channel between the second antenna and the receiver from the antenna gain between the second antenna and the receiver and from the atmospheric attenuation,   estimates the interferer power from the obtained antennas gains and estimations.       
 
         [0072]      FIG. 2  is a diagram representing the architecture of a receiver in which the present invention is implemented. 
         [0073]    The receiver Rec has, for example, an architecture based on components connected together by a bus  201  and a processor  200  controlled by the programs as disclosed in  FIG. 4 . 
         [0074]    The bus  201  links the processor  200  to a read only memory ROM  202 , a random access memory RAM  203  and a wireless interface  205 . 
         [0075]    The memory  203  contains registers intended to receive variables and the instructions of the programs related to the algorithm as disclosed in  FIG. 4 . 
         [0076]    The processor  200  controls the operation of the wireless interface  205 . 
         [0077]    The read only memory  202  contains instructions of the programs related to the algorithm as disclosed in  FIG. 4 , which are transferred, when the receiver Rec is powered on, to the random access memory  203 . 
         [0078]    The wireless interface  205  comprises two antennas Ant 1  and Ant 2  capable of detecting the two different polarizations. 
         [0079]    Any and all steps of the algorithms described hereafter with regard to  FIG. 4  may be implemented in software by execution of a set of instructions or program by a programmable computing machine, such as a PC (Personal Computer), a DSP (Digital Signal Processor) or a microcontroller; or else implemented in hardware by a machine or a dedicated component, such as an FPGA (Field-Programmable Gate Array) or an ASIC (Application-Specific Integrated Circuit). 
         [0080]    In other words, the receiver Rec includes circuitry, or a device including circuitry, causing the receiver Rec to perform the steps of the algorithm described hereafter with regard to  FIG. 4 . 
         [0081]      FIG. 3  represents an example of a crosspolar interferer frame overlapping in the time and frequency planes with the useful data frame at the receiver side. 
         [0082]    The horizontal axis represents the time plane and the vertical axis represents the frequency plane. 
         [0083]    A first frame  31  is sent on one polarization, and a second frame  32  is sent on a second polarization by the satellite Sat. 
         [0084]    Without loss of generality, let us assume that frame  31  is the useful signal intended for the receiver Rec and that frame  32  is intended for another receiver in an adjacent beam. When the polarized waveform travels through the troposphere, impairments appear, the orthogonality is lost, which leads to crosstalk between the two polarizations and thus the second frame  32  becomes a crosspolar interferer for the first frame  31 . 
         [0085]    The frames  31  and  32  may have a different length, as shown in  FIG. 3  and may totally or partially overlap each other in the time and/or frequency planes. Both frames  31  and  32  may contain data and pilots. The pilot positions of frame  31  are noted x and the pilot positions of frame  32  are noted o. 
         [0086]    The useful frame  31  and the interfering frame  32  are not aligned and the transmission of their respective pilot sequences is not coordinated. The two frames have different start/end positions in the time plane and they occupy different bandwidths. Data/pilots of frame  31  may be interfered by data/pilots of frame  32  or may be interference free. The receiver Rec has no prior knowledge of the existence, position or structure of the interfering frame  32 . 
         [0087]      FIG. 4  represents an algorithm executed by the receiver Rec according to the present invention. More precisely, the present algorithm is executed by the processor  200  of the receiver Rec. 
         [0088]    At step S 400 , the processor  200  obtains the transmit antenna gains a 1   Tx  and a 2   Tx  at the satellite Sat side. 
         [0089]    The wireless interface  205  detects simultaneously both polarizations. In the absence of an interferer, the received signal on the two polarizations may be written as: 
         [0000]    
       
      
       y 
       1 
       =h 
       1 
       s 
       1 
       +n 
       1  
      
     
         [0000]    
       
      
       y 
       2 
       =h 
       1 
       As 
       1 
       +n 
       2  
      
     
         [0090]    where s 1  is the symbol transmitted by the satellite Sat on one polarization and intended for the receiver Rec, h 1  is the channel experienced by the symbol transmitted from the satellite Sat on said polarization and received by the receiver Rec, A is the crosspolar attenuation and n 1 , n 2  represent the additive white Gaussian noise of variance σ n   2  on the two receive antennas. 
         [0091]    In the presence of an interferer, the above equation rewrites as 
         [0000]    
       
      
       y 
       1 
       ′=h 
       1 
       s 
       1 
       +h 
       2 
       As 
       2 
       +n 
       1  
      
     
         [0000]    
       
      
       y 
       2 
       ′=h 
       1 
       As 
       1 
       +h 
       2 
       s 
       2 
       +n 
       2  
      
     
         [0092]    where s 2  is the interfering symbol transmitted by the satellite Sat on the second polarization intended for another receiver and h 2  is the channel experienced by the interfering symbol transmitted from the satellite Sat on the other polarization and received by the receiver Rec. 
         [0093]    The channel between the satellite Sat and the receiver Rec is supposed static during the transmission. Since the receiver Rec is at a given and stable position and in line of sight with the satellite Sat, the channel between the satellite Sat and the receiver Rec can be decomposed as: 
         [0000]      h 1 =a 1 b 
         [0000]      h 2 =a 2 b 
         [0094]    where a 1  and a 2  represent antenna gains and b is the attenuation due to atmospheric conditions. Since for a given receiver Rec not moving during the transmission, the distance between the satellite Sat and the receiver Rec does not change, the free space propagation loss between the satellite Sat and the receiver Rec is known and may be omitted in the following. It can be considered as included either in the antenna gains or in the atmospheric attenuation. This propagation loss will not be mentioned explicitly any longer and it is omitted in the following. 
         [0095]    b is the atmospheric attenuation due to atmospheric conditions. Atmospheric attenuation b is quasi-static and is given by the atmospheric conditions in the reception area. Atmospheric attenuation b is thus the same for both polarizations. Crosspolar attenuation A depends on the atmospheric attenuation b. 
         [0096]    The antenna gains a 1  and a 2  are different for the two polarizations. 
         [0097]    Each of them are composed of a transmit antenna gain a i   Tx  at the satellite Sat side depending on the radiation pattern on the satellite Sat and a receive antenna gain a i   Rx  at the receiver Rec depending on the antenna characteristics of the receiver Rec. Moreover, a i =a i   Tx a i   Rx , with i={1,2}. The transmit antenna patterns may be different for the two polarizations. 
         [0098]    For example, the signal intended to the receiver Rec is received in the direction of the main lobe of the satellite antenna for one polarization, while the crosspolar interfering signal may be received in the direction of a secondary lobe, the main lobe of the crosspolar transmission creating the adjacent beam. 
         [0099]    The satellite Sat antenna transmit pattern creates at the terrestrial surface a footprint. 
         [0100]    A fixed receiver Rec is able to know the satellite footprint corresponding to its location, and is thus able to know the transmit antenna gains a 1   Tx  and a 2   Tx  at the satellite Sat side, via a map or other information provided by the satellite operator and stored in the RAM memory  203 . 
         [0101]    The transmit antenna gains value a 1   Tx  and a 2   Tx  at the satellite Sat side are quasi-static for fixed receivers and are to be updated only in case of changes in the configuration of the satellite beams, or a change of position of the receiver Rec for example. 
         [0102]    Periodic or on-request updates transmit antenna gains values a 1   Tx  and a 2   Tx  may be executed by the processor  200 . The same reasoning stands for the attenuation due to free space propagation loss between the satellite Sat and the receiver Rec. 
         [0103]    At next step S 401 , the processor  200  obtains the receive antenna gains a 1   Rx , a 2   Rx  of the receiver Rec. 
         [0104]    The receiving antennas Ant 1  and Ant 2  characteristics are known by the processor  200  and stored in the ROM memory  202 , as they are a build-in parameter, but the receive antenna gains a 1   Rx , a 2   Rx  may vary in function of the quality of the antennas alignment for example. 
         [0105]    The processor  200  is able to estimate or acquire knowledge of receive antenna gains a 1   Rx , a 2   Rx  during a calibration phase. Such a calibration may occur, for example, at each position change of the receiver Rec, or on regular basis. 
         [0106]    Usually, a 1   Rx =a 2   Rx . 
         [0107]    At next step S 402 , the processor  200  computes a 1 =a 1   Tx a 1   Rx  and a 2 =a 2   Tx a 2   Rx . 
         [0108]    At next step S 403 , the processor  200  estimates the useful channel {tilde over (h)} 1  using any classical channel estimation methods, as, for example, based on pilot symbols. 
         [0109]    At next step S 404 , the processor  200  computes the estimated value b; of the atmospheric attenuation b. 
         [0110]    On pilot positions, the transmitted useful signal is a known training sequence z. The receiver Rec has no knowledge of the nature of the interfering signal transmitted on the same positions. The processor  200  computes, on pilot positions: 
         [0000]        E{z*y   1   ′}=E{z *( h   1   z+h   2   As   2   +n   1 )}= h   1   E{|z|   2   }=a   1   bE{|z|   2 } 
         [0000]        E{z*y   2   ′}=E{z *( h   1   Az+h   2   s   2   +n   2 )}= h   1   AE{z   2   }=a   1   bAE{|z|   2 } 
         [0111]    where E{.} is the mean value, z denotes pilot symbols and * denotes the complex conjugate. These average values may be computed including at most all the pilot symbols in the received frame. Less positions may be considered in order to reduce the number of computations. In that case, a sufficient number of pilot symbols needs to be averaged in order for the statistic to be reliable. The processor  200  can thus calculate the estimated value b of atmospheric attenuation b as: 
         [0000]        {tilde over (b)}=E{z*y   1 ′}/( a   1   E{|z|   2 })
 
         [0112]    In a variant, the estimated value {tilde over (b)} of atmospheric attenuation b can also be computed as: 
         [0000]    
       
      
       {tilde over (b)}={tilde over (h)} 
       1 
       /a 
       1  
      
     
         [0113]    At next step S 405 , the processor  200  computes the estimated value Ã of the crosspolar attenuation A as: 
         [0000]        Ã=E{z*y′   2 }/( a   1   {tilde over (b)}E{|z|   2 }) 
         [0114]    Another means of computing the estimated value Ã of the crosspolar attenuation is to compute: 
         [0000]        Ã=E{z*y′   2   }/E{z*y   1 ′}
 
         [0115]    or to compute 
         [0000]        Ã=E{z*y′   2 }/( {tilde over (h)}   1   E{|z|   2 }) 
         [0116]    In the absence of a second receive antenna, the processor  200  may use empirical curves giving average crosspolar attenuation values in function of the carrier frequency and of the atmospheric attenuation b in order to compute the estimated value Ã of the crosspolar attenuation. 
         [0117]    At next step S 406 , the processor  200  computes the estimated value k of the interferer channel. 
         [0118]    Based on the particular nature of the channel between the satellite Sat and the receiver Rec, the processor  200  is able to estimate the quality of the interfering channel, without prior knowledge of the interferer and without any interference mitigation schemes implemented at the transmitter side as 
         [0000]      {tilde over (h)} 2 =a 2 {tilde over (b)} 
         [0119]    At next step S 407 , the processor  200  estimates the interferer&#39;s power {tilde over (σ)} s     2     2 . 
         [0120]    From the received signal on pilot positions and using the estimates computed here-above, the processor  200  computes: 
         [0000]        E{|y   1   ′−a   1   {tilde over (b)}z|   2   }=E{|a   2   {tilde over (b)}Ãs   2 | 2   }+E{|n   1 | 2 }+ε 1   =|a   2   {tilde over (b)}Ã|   2 σ s     2     2 +σ n   2 +ε 1  
 
         [0000]        E{|y   2   ′−a   1   {tilde over (b)}Ãz|   2   }=E{|a   2   {tilde over (b)}s   2 | 2   }+E{|n   2 | 2 }+ε 2   =|a   2   {tilde over (b)}|   2 σ s     2     2 +σ n   2 +ε 2  
 
         [0121]    where σ X   2  is the variance of X when X has zero mean, and ε 1 , ε 2  are models estimation errors. These average values may be computed on all pilot symbols occupying several subcarriers/time slots during which the nature of the interference does not change. 
         [0122]    If the noise variance is known and the estimation errors ε 1 , ε 2  are assumed negligible, the estimated value of the interferer power may be computed as 
         [0000]    
       
         
           
             
               
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         [0123]    where the averaging function E{.} operates over several subcarriers/time slots during which the nature of the interference does not change. 
         [0124]    The processor  200  has thus computed estimated values of the useful channel, interferer channel and interferer power, and has knowledge of the noise variance. 
         [0125]    If the noise variance is not known, the interference power may be estimated as: 
         [0000]      {tilde over (σ)} s     2     2 =( E{|y   1   ′−a   1   {tilde over (b)}z|   2   }−E{|y′   2   −a   1   {tilde over (b)}Ãz|   2 })/(| a   2   {tilde over (b)}Ã|   2   −|a   2   {tilde over (b)}|   2 )
 
         [0126]    where the averaging function E{.} operates over several subcarriers/time slots during which the nature of the interference does not change. 
         [0127]    According to a particular mode of realization of the present invention, the processor  200  may use the estimated value of the interference power in order to compute in two different manners the estimated value of the noise variance: 
         [0000]      {tilde over (σ)}′ n   2   =E{|y   1   ′−a   1   {tilde over (b)}z|   2   }−|a   2   {tilde over (b)}Ã|   2 {tilde over (σ)} s     2     2  
 
         [0000]      {tilde over (σ)}″ n   2   =E{|y   2   ′−a   1   {tilde over (b)}Ãz|   2   }−|a   2   {tilde over (b)}|   2 {tilde over (σ)} s     2     2  
 
         [0128]    When the noise variance is not known, the processor  200  moves to step S 408  and checks if the two estimates {tilde over (σ)}′ n   2  and {tilde over (σ)}″ n   2  are consistent. 
         [0129]    If the two estimates {tilde over (σ)}′ n   2  and {tilde over (σ)}″ n   2  are consistent, e.g. their difference is below a given threshold like for example less than ten percent of difference, or {tilde over (σ)}′ n   2 /{tilde over (σ)}″ n   2  is close to 1, the processor  200  determines that the suppositions here-above were correct, that estimation errors are negligible and the processor  200  determines a reliable estimated value of the noise variance as: 
         [0000]      {tilde over (σ)} n   2   =E{{tilde over (σ)}′   n   2 , {tilde over (σ)}″ n   2 }.
 
         [0130]    Since the noise variance does not change during a received frame, several individual values {tilde over (σ)} n   2 , each one being obtained on an interval during which the interference nature does not change, may be further averaged together in order to improve the reliability of the estimated value of the noise variance. 
         [0131]    The processor  200  has thus computed estimated values of the useful channel, interferer channel, interferer power and noise variance. The processor  200  moves then to step S 409 . 
         [0132]    If the two estimates {tilde over (σ)}″ n   2  and {tilde over (σ)}″ n   2  are not consistent, the processor  200  determines that the estimation errors are too high and decides not to apply any interference mitigation techniques. The processor  200  interrupts the present algorithm. 
         [0133]    According to a particular mode of realization, when the noise variance σ n   2  is known or was elsewhere estimated by different means, the processor  200  may compute at step S 408  the estimated value of the noise variance following the exact same procedure as described here-above in the case where the noise variance is not known. 
         [0134]    As a supplementary reliability check, if the estimated value {tilde over (σ)} n   2  is consistent with the known value σ n   2  the processor  200  decides that estimation errors are negligible and proceeds to implementing interference mitigation techniques. The processor  200  moves then to step S 409 . 
         [0135]    If the estimated value {tilde over (σ)} n   2  is not consistent with the known value σ n   2 , the processor  200  determines that the estimation errors are too high and decides not to apply any interference mitigation techniques. The processor  200  interrupts the present algorithm. 
         [0136]    At step S 409 , the receiver Rec is able to implement interference mitigation techniques such as, for example, joint minimum mean square error (MMSE) detection. It has to be noted here that, without further knowledge on the interferer, the receiver Rec is not able to estimate the interferer stream or apply successive interference cancellation, but the receiver Rec is able to improve the detection of the useful signal. 
         [0137]    Naturally, many modifications can be made to the embodiments of the invention described above without departing from the scope of the present invention.