Abstract:
A receiving system  100  is disclosed which includes at least one antenna  101  providing a plurality of antenna beams providing signal diversity between communicated signals. A first processing branch  103  is included for processing a first plurality of signals appearing within a first plurality of the antenna beams. The first processing branch  103  includes a plurality of signal paths, some of which include delays  105 , each receiving a one of the first plurality of signals from a corresponding one of the first plurality of antenna beams. Delays  105  apply a predetermined amount of delay proportionate to the corresponding one of the beams. First processing branch  103  further includes a combiner  106  for combining the first plurality of signals after output from the plurality of signal paths. A second processing branch  104  is provided for processing a second plurality of signals appearing within a second plurality of the antenna beams. Second processing branch  104  includes a plurality of signal paths, some of which include delays  105 , each receiving one of the second plurality of signals from a corresponding one of the second plurality of antenna beams. Delays  105  applying a pre-selected amount of delay to the corresponding one of the beams. Second processing branch  104  further includes a combiner  106  for combining the second plurality of signals after output from the plurality of signal paths. Finally, a radio  102  is provided having a first port coupled to an output of first processing branch  103  and a second port coupled to a second processing branch  104.

Description:
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
     The present application is a continuation-in-part of and commonly assigned U.S. application Ser. No. 08/923,051, entitled “DIVERSITY AMONG NARROW ANTENNA BEAMS,” filed Sep. 3, 1997, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,005,516, which application is itself is a continuation-in-part of and commonly assigned U.S. application Ser. No. 08/726,277, entitled “NARROW BEAM WIRELESS SYSTEMS WITH ANGULARLY DIVERSE ANTENNAS,” filed Oct. 4, 1996, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,757,318, which application is itself a continuation of commonly assigned U.S. application Ser. No. 08/488,793, entitled “NARROW BEAM ANTENNA SYSTEMS WITH ANGULAR DIVERSITY,” filed Jun. 8, 1995, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,610, each of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein. 
     The present application is also related to copending, commonly assigned, U.S. application Ser. No. 08/520,316, entitled “NARROW BEAM ANTENNA SYSTEMS WITH ANGULAR DIVERSITY,” now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,610, and U.S. application Ser. No. 09/229,492, entitled “INDOOR DISTRIBUTED MICROCELL,” filed Jan. 11, 1999, each of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein. 
    
    
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
     The present invention relates in general to wireless communications systems and in particular to apparatus, systems and methods for providing signal diversity utilizing multiple antenna beams in such systems. 
     BACKGROUND 
     The performance of wireless communications systems, including analogue, time division multiple access (TDMA), frequency division multiple access (FDMA) and code division multiple access (CDMA) systems, is adversely affected by interference. One source of interference at the base station is caused by the simultaneous receipt of signals from multiple remote (mobile) units, and in particular when those mobile units are broadcasting on the same frequency. Assuming an ideal antenna and signal propagation conditions, and that the base station is receiving signals of substantially the same power (in CDMA) from each of the mobile units, the level of interference noise is directly proportional to the number of mobile unit signals received at the base station antenna. This problem is compounded when a mobile unit closer to the base station masks the signals received from mobile units a farther distant. 
     Another type of interference which adversely affects wireless communications systems is caused by multipath effects. In this case, the signal broadcast from a given mobile unit will reflect off various objects in the surrounding environment. As a result, multiple reflected signals taking multiple paths of varying path lengths arrive at the receiver. These multipath components (reflections) arrive at the receiver antenna with varying time delays (phase differences), and depending on the corresponding path lengths, may combine to produce fades in signal strength. In the worst case where multipath signals are received one-half wavelength out of phase, a null can occur due to signal cancellation. 
     By minimizing interference in the link from the mobile unit to base station the ability to extract data from that signal is improved (i.e. an improved bit-error rate is achieved). Further improvement can be achieved if the gain of the receive antenna is increased or the receiver noise figure is decreased. The most substantial improvements in receiver performance occur if interference minimization is achieved in conjunction with an increase in gain. 
     The use of diverse antenna locations, i.e., spatially diverse antennas, is useful in providing improved signal reception at receivers, such as the above mentioned TDMA, FDMA, and CDMA receiving systems. For example, analogue advanced mobile phone service (AMPS) and digital advanced mobile phone service (DAMPS) receivers may employ spatially diverse antennas in the receive signal path to provide improved reception of signals. In one such configuration, the receiver receives data from three 120° sectors, together providing 360° coverage. Each 120° sector is covered by two 120° antennas with identical views, one antenna feeding the receiver main (or diversity  1 ) port and the other feeding the receiver diversity (or diversity  2 ) port. Alternatively, omni-directional antennas may be used to feed a receiver having only a sector and a diversity port. The antennas are typically separated by a predetermined number of wavelengths in order to provide spatial diversity. This spatial diversity ensures that the incoming multipath components from a given mobile unit transmission are substantially uncorrelated. 
     If the number of required antennas could be reduced, and/or the need to space antennas by substantial distances could be eliminated, a more compact and less complicated base station could be built. Further, if in doing so, interference reduction and gain improvement could also be achieved, the receiver operation could simultaneously be improved. 
     In sum, the need exists for improved apparatus, systems and methods for receiving signals in a wireless communications system. Such apparatus, systems and methods should reduce interference power and improve receiver gain. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The principles of the present invention allow for multiple antenna beams to be used to feed a smaller number of receiver input ports. Such multiple beams may be provided by a multibeam antenna (or antennas) and/or a plurality of co-located discreet antennas. By using multiple, narrow, beams to focus on selected mobile units, interference can be substantially reduced and antenna gain substantially increased. Similarly, using polarized beams, interference can be substantially reduced through the use of a beam polarized for selected mobile units and/or through the use of combining of alternately polarized antenna beams in order to minimize or avoid destructive combining of received signals. Systems embodying the principles of the present invention can be advantageously applied to wireless communication systems, such as cellular telephone systems and personal communication services (PCS), although such principles are not necessarily limited to these applications. 
     According to a first embodiment of the present invention, a communication system is provided which includes at least one antenna providing a plurality of antenna beams, ones of which are alternately or differently polarized. Ones of these antenna beams are combined for coupling to a radio, such as a voice receiver radio, or other equipment in order to allow for forming or synthesizing sectors of desired widths from the multiple antenna beams, to provide improved signal quality, or the like. 
     A first processing branch is preferably included for processing a first plurality of signals associated with first selected ones of the antenna beams. The signal paths are each adapted to receive at least one of the first plurality of signals associated with corresponding ones of the first antenna beams. The first processing branch also preferably includes a combiner for combining the first plurality of signals for coupling to an interface of the radio or other equipment. 
     A second processing branch is also preferably provided for processing a second plurality of signals associated with second selected ones of the antenna beams. The signal paths are each adapted receive at least one of the second plurality of signals associated with corresponding ones of the second antenna beams. A combiner is also preferably provided for combining the second plurality of signals for coupling to another interface of the radio or other equipment. 
     In order to better provide combining of uncorrelated signals and, thus, to avoid destructive combining of signals by either of the first and second processing branches, the antenna beams combined in both the first processing branch and the second processing branch are preferably alternately polarized. For example, where the first processing branch combines the signals of four contiguous antenna beams to form a sector of a desired width, a first and third non-adjacent antenna beam to be combined by the first processing branch are each associated with antennas having a first polarization, and a second and fourth non-adjacent antenna beam to be combined by the first processing branch are each associated with antennas having a second polarization. Accordingly, utilizing both angular and polarization diversity, signal orthogonality may be optimized to avoid destructive combining as those antenna beams having a least amount of angular diversity (low order directional orthogonality) are combined having the benefit of polarization diversity (high order polarization orthogonality). 
     The first and/or second processing branch may include additional circuitry to further decorrelate signals to be combined, such as delays associated with ones of the plurality of signal paths. However, the above described combining of the various antenna beam signals in each processing branch according to the preferred embodiment provides sufficiently orthogonal signals that such delays are not necessary. 
     It shall be appreciated that the above described interfaces of the radio or other equipment may be interfaces each associated with a different communication or overhead channel, such as a frequency division channel, time division channel, or code division channel. Alternatively, the above described interfaces may be related interfaces, such as a sector and diversity input, associated with a same channel. 
     The above described alternately polarized antenna beams may be provided by a number of antenna beam arrangements, such as might be provided by an antenna structure adapted to provide substantially non-overlapping antenna beams throughout a desired area of coverage, ones of which being provided with differing polarization. However, a preferred embodiment of the present invention utilizes an antenna structure to provide antenna beams which substantially overlap. For example, according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a first set of substantially non-overlapping antenna beams having a first polarization may be provided and a second set of substantially non-overlapping antenna beams having a second polarization may be provided which overlap the first set of antenna beams. According to this preferred embodiment, communications within any particular portion of the area served or illuminated by the antenna structure may be served at least by two antenna beams of varying polarization. 
     Preferably, the antenna structure includes collocated sets of alternately polarized antenna elements to provide dual polarization in a physical configuration substantially consistent with that of a singularly polarized antenna. Accordingly, the physical aperture, and thus its aesthetic qualities as well as other physical considerations, such as wind loading, remain substantially unaffected as between a polarization diverse antenna of this preferred embodiment and a singularly polarized multibeam antenna of the prior art. 
     The principles of the present invention provide substantial advantages over the prior art. In particular, multiple antennas or antenna beams may be connected to a receiver which has a number of input ports less than the number of antennas desired. Further, according to the present invention, narrow beam antennas may be used with a receiver to substantially reduce interference and provide increased antenna gain. Further, antennas constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention do not require substantial, or even precise, spacing between antennas or antenna beam phase centers, as is required in prior art antenna systems to ensure that incoming signals are uncorrelated or do not destructively combine. 
     The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features and technical advantages of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be described hereinafter which form the subject of the claims of the invention. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the conception and the specific embodiment disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. It should also be realized by those skilled in the art that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 
     For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which: 
     FIG. 1 is a beam diagram depicting one possible distribution of antenna beams according to the principles of the present invention; 
     FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of the operation of the system of the present invention; 
     FIG. 3 illustrates overlapping beams providing polarization diversity; 
     FIGS. 4A-4B illustrate alternative embodiments of the multiple beams of the present invention; 
     FIG. 5 is a functional block diagram of a receiving system according to the present invention; 
     FIGS. 6A and 6B are a functional block diagram of an alternate receiving system according to the present invention; 
     FIGS. 7A-7C and  8  show functional block diagrams of circuitry of the present invention adapted to provide communication of multiple antenna beam signals through a common signal path; and 
     FIG. 9 is a functional block diagram of a prior art CDMA receiving system. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     The principles of the present invention and their advantages are best understood by referring to the illustrated embodiment depicted in FIGS. 1-8 of the drawings, in which like numbers designate like parts. 
     FIG. 9 is a general block diagram of a prior art base station configuration  1100  typically used in presently available wireless communications systems, such as cellular telephone systems. In the conventional system of FIG. 9 receiver  1101  receives signals from three “faces,” each of which covers a 120° sector. Each sector is concurrently covered by two antennas: a sector antenna  1102  with a 120° field of coverage and diversity antenna  1103 , also with a field of coverage of 120°. The sector antenna  1102  and diversity antenna  1103  for each face is physically spaced by a range of approximately 10 to 20 times the wavelength of the received signal. In current cellular telephone systems, this equates to approximately 10 to 20 feet. While further separation would be desirable to insure that the incoming signals are uncorrelated, increased separation is typically impractical due to space limitations. 
     Directing attention to FIG. 1, it should be appreciated that multiple narrow antenna beams may be utilized to provide communication within a 360° service area similar to that provided by the system of FIG.  9 . For example, antenna beams X 1 -Xj, Y 1 -Yk, and Z 1 -Zm may be utilized to provide communication in 120° portions of the service area corresponding to that of antennas  1102   a  and  1103   a ,  1102   b  and  1103   b , and  1102   c  and  1103   c  respectively. The variables j, k, and m are preferably each equal to a same value N, although differing numbers of antenna beams may be utilized according to the present invention. 
     By employing narrow multiple beams instead of the wide single beams used in present systems, substantial performance improvement is achieved. First, since narrow beams are more highly directional, focus on the signal from a desired mobile in a wireless communications system can be made to the exclusion of signals from other mobiles operating in the same sector. This focusing is preferably done on the basis of the mobile user&#39;s assigned identification code, SAT tone or other unique identification information. This feature reduces the interference from undesired mobiles. An example is shown in FIG. 2 where eight mobile units are operating in the sector with the base station attempting to receive a single mobile (based on the users identification code). Six of the other mobiles are excluded as being outside the beam coverage of the narrow beam directed at the desired mobile; noise from direct signals is thereby reduced from 7noise units to 1. 
     Similarly, beams utilizing different polarization to focus on the signal from a desired mobile can be utilized to exclude signals from other mobiles operating in the same sector. For example, users of hand held mobiles very rarely hold the mobile unit antenna vertically, and instead typically cock the unit at approximately 45 degrees, whereas mobiles mounted in vehicles typically utilize a vertically mounted antenna. As a result, beams polarized differently, i.e., vertical and horizontal, slant left and slant right, and/or left circular and right circular, may be used to focus on a desired mobile unit. As described above, this focusing is preferably done on the basis of the mobile user&#39;s assigned identification code or other unique information. This feature reduces the interference from undesired mobiles polarized differently than the desired mobile, as their signal component in the cross-polarization direction is removed by selecting only a cross polarized beam. 
     In addition to reducing interference by excluding undesired mobiles, narrower beams generally provide higher gain. Higher gain allows the mobiles to transmit with less power or operate over longer paths (separations from the base station) with the same power. Finally, the multibeam approach, whether providing angular or polarization diversity, is advantageously compact as signal diversity does not depend on separation of the beam sources. 
     As discussed above, substantial spacing is not required to maintain signal separation with the present invention. Beams (from either a multiple-beam antenna or a plurality of discrete antennas) may provide signal diversity through the use of, for example, antennas with angular diversity, spatial diversity, polarization diversity, or any combination thereof. To provide angular diversity, beams are adapted to provide different angular coverage (i.e., each beam has a different azimuthal view). Since each beam is viewing a different phase front, the signals received by such beams are uncorrelated. 
     Polarization diversity is accomplished by adapting beams to provide differing polarization. Since beams of each polarization are responsive only to radiated signals having a matching polarization component, the signals received by the beams may be uncorrelated. 
     It should be noted that polarized antenna beams may improve performance other than by their utilization to provide uncorrelated signals. As discussed above, users of hand held mobiles very rarely hold the mobile unit antenna vertically, such that the polarization of the mobile unit antenna matches that of the base station. Likewise, reflected signals providing a received signal straight suitable for use in communication, may be polarized differently than either the mobile unit or the base station antennas. As a result, the component in the cross-polarization direction is lost at the base station. Additionally, the use of polarized antenna beams may also improve performance through allowing the combining of antenna beams, such as to provide synthesized sector patterns, increase antenna aperture with respect to particular mobile units, or improve signal to noise characteristics, without unexpectedly destructively and beneficially combining due to a particular phase relationship of the signal as among the combined beams. 
     Antenna  101  adapted to provide polarization diversity is shown in FIG. 4 having differently polarized overlapping beams. Accordingly, the polarization of a second antenna is preferably orthogonal (or at least offset) from the polarization of a first antenna. For example, the first and second antennas may be right hand and left hand polarized or horizontally and vertically polarized, respectively. With such an arrangement, the signal component in the cross-polarization direction may now be received by a cross-polarized second antenna, thus improving signal reception by receiving a signal component previously not available and by allowing adjacent antenna beams which are alternately polarized to be summed without destructively combining. In the system illustrated in FIG. 3 alternating beams are each polarized differently. For example, beams  1  and  2 , shown overlapping, may provide radiation pattern  402  with right hand and left hand polarization respectively. Similarly, beams N−1 and N, also shown overlapping, may provide radiation pattern  403  with right hand and left hand polarization respectively. 
     Of course, alternative arrangements providing antenna beams of different polarizations may be utilized according to the present invention, if desired. For example, antenna  101  may be constructed from a plurality of polarized multibeam antennas whose patterns overlap such that the cross-over from one pattern is at the peak of another. 
     It shall be appreciated that use of overlapping beams requires either less narrow beam widths or additional beams to provide the same azimuthal coverage as the angularly diverse system described above. For example, where four 30° substantially non-overlapping beams provide 120° coverage, four 60° overlapping beams provide 120° coverage with the antenna of FIG.  3 . 
     It shall be appreciated that, although the embodiment of FIG. 3 has been discussed with respect to polarization diversity alone, the embodiment illustrated also provides angular diversity as well. Angular diversity is provided by the multiple narrow beams disposed for different azimuthal coverage within the sector. 
     Of course, consistent with the principles of the present invention, more than four beams per sector may be utilized. In fact a preferred embodiment of the present invention, as is described with respect to FIG. 4B below, utilizes a first set of antenna elements polarized in a first orientation, such as vertical, and coupled to a first beam forming matrix, such as a Butler matrix well known in the art, to provide four substantially non-overlapping antenna beams of a sector face. A second set of antenna elements polarized in a second orientation, such as horizontal, are substantially collocated with the first set of antenna elements. The second set of antenna elements are coupled to a second beam forming matrix also providing four substantially non-overlapping antenna beams of a sector face. However, according to this preferred embodiment of the present invention, the antenna beams of the first antenna set and the second antenna set overlap such that eight antenna beams are provided substantially as shown in FIG. 3, thus doubling the number of antenna beams available. Of course, partially overlapping beams, rather than the fully overlapping antenna beams of FIG. 3, may be utilized by the present invention to provide polarization diversity, if desired. 
     Directing attention to FIGS. 4A through 4B, various combinations of the aforementioned signal diversity methods are shown as being implemented in a three sectored cell. FIG. 4A shows an alternative embodiment providing angular diversity in combination with polarization diversity as antenna system  501 . It shall be understood that the beams of each sector may be provided as discussed above with respect to antenna  101 . Here non-overlapping antenna beams  1  through  4  of each sector are adapted to provide both angular diversity and polarization diversity (where L=left polarization and R=right polarization). 
     FIG. 4B illustrates a preferred embodiment of the present invention wherein antenna beams having orthogonal polarization are overlapped as provided from antenna system  530 . Accordingly, each of the three sectors illustrated includes eight antenna beams, four of which (beams  1 ,  3 ,  5 , and  7  of each sector) are vertically polarized and an overlapping four of which (beams  2 ,  4 ,  6 , and  8  of each sector) are horizontally polarized. 
     An embodiment of circuitry adapted according to the principles of the present invention is depicted in FIG.  5 . Receiving system  600  uses a multiple beam antenna structure, shown here as multiple antennas  601 , to direct antenna beams to the mobile units. These antennas preferably produce narrow beams, and may be utilized to provide angular, spatial, and/or polarization diversity. In the embodiment of FIG. 5, a matrix switch  602 , which may be a portion of a spectrum management unit adapted to selectively couple antenna beam signals with communication equipment interfaces, switches a selected number of antennas to receiver  603 . Transmitter  604  is also shown for reference. Assume for discussion purposes that the three face system of FIG. 1 is being implemented. 
     Assuming for discussion that R=6, R being the number of lines coupling matrix switch  602  and receiver  603 , if j=k=m=4, j, k, and m being the number of antenna beams in each sector, then the outputs from two selected antennas per sector are coupled to receiver  603 . Preferably, with current receiver technology, only signals from antennas associated with a single sector are provided to a main and diversity input port pair of receiver  603 . For example, two antenna beam signals from a first sector may be provided to a first sector main and diversity input port pair of receiver  603  while two antenna beam signals from a second sector are provided to a second sector main and diversity input port pair of receiver  603 . Of course, signals associated with different sectors may be provided to the same input port pair of a receiver where it is deemed advantageous, such as when synthesizing sectors of different sizes or orientations. 
     Receiver  603 , or other control circuitry, may automatically select antenna beams providing a most desired attribute, such as the strongest signal with respect to a particular signal, for input into a sector input port of each input port pair of receiver  603 . Accordingly, a signal of another antenna beam or beams of the sector, such as antenna beams adjacent to the antenna beams providing the strongest signal, is provided to the diversity input port of the input port pair. Of course, many other combinations are possible. 
     Finally, assuming j, k, or m is greater than R, then multiple ones of the antenna beam signals may be combined for input into a sector and/or diversity input port of each input port pair of receiver  603 . Preferably, where adjacent antenna beam signals are combined for input into a same input port, these adjacent antenna beam signals are associated with antennas having orthogonal or otherwise diverse polarization in order to avoid or minimize undesired effects of summing, such as destructive combining. 
     It shall be appreciated that the introduction of polarization diversity at a multiple beam base site may increase the number of antenna beams and therefore require additional circuitry and/or special adaption of existing circuitry in order to accommodate the polarization diverse antenna beams. For example, the above described overlapping orthogonally polarized antenna beams of FIG. 4B, such as may be provided using the aforementioned collocated alternately polarized antenna elements, although providing the benefits of substantially 30° narrow antenna beams in combination with the availability of each of the two orthogonal polarizations within any area served by the antenna system, presents a number of antenna beam signals twice that of the antenna systems of FIG. 4A, for example. 
     Accordingly, a preferred embodiment of the present invention provides such additional circuitry and/or special adaption by making efficient use of communications equipment, such as by utilizing portions of such equipment to serve more than one function. As such the preferred embodiment not only presents a more economical system for deploying mutiply diverse antenna beams, but also allows for retrofitting base sites originally deployed without the benefit of the present invention. 
     Directing attention to FIGS. 6A and 6B, a preferred embodiment of the present invention adapted so as to efficiently use base station equipment in providing polarization diverse antenna beams overlapping another antenna beam set having a different polarization is shown generally as system  800 . It shall be appreciated that antennas  810  are vertically polarized and may be disposed to provide substantially non-overlapping antenna beams substantially as illustrated in FIG.  1 . Accordingly, each antenna beam signal, as formed by a corresponding beam forming matrix  820   a - 820   c , is coupled to a first spectrum management unit (SMU)  801 . SMU  801  is preferably adapted to provide antenna beam signal monitoring, switching, and combining such that desired combinations of the antenna beams associated with antennas  810  may be selectively coupled to the sector and diversity inputs of a receiver, such as three sector receiver  803 . Accordingly, antenna beams having a preferred attribute, such as a strongest signal with respect to a particular mobile unit operating on a channel of a first sector, for example, may be combined and coupled to a sector and/or diversity input of receiver  803  associated with that particular sector. Similarly, multiple ones of the antenna beam signals may be combined for coupling to particular sector inputs in order to form or synthesize a desired sector pattern size and/or orientation (i.e., azimuthal direction). 
     In order to provide system fault tolerance, a second spectrum management unit (SMU)  802  may be provided as a “hot swap,” i.e., fully energized and functional, redundant piece of equipment providing the exact same functionality as SMU  801 . SMU  802  may have originally been deployed at a base site having only vertically polarized angularly diverse antenna beams, for example, to standby until such time as SMU  801  exhibits symptoms of malfunction. However, a preferred embodiment of the present invention includes a second set of antennas, antennas  811 , polarized in a second orientation, here vertical, substantially collocated with antennas  810 . According to this preferred embodiment of the present invention, the antenna beams of the first antenna set and the second antenna set overlap, thus doubling the number of antenna beams available. However, as each horizontally polarized antenna beam signal, as formed by a corresponding beam forming matrix  821   a - 821   c , is coupled to redundant SMU  802 , a minimum of additional equipment is required in order to provide polarization diversity according to this preferred embodiment. 
     The circuitry of SMUs  801  and  802  preferably allow any antenna beam signal of antennas  810  and  811  to be coupled to any input of receiver  803 . Accordingly, a great amount of flexibility in providing air link communication with mobiles operable within the area of influence of a base station employing system  800  is provided. 
     For example, where a sector is to be formed or synthesized which is comprised of multiple contiguous antenna beams, i.e., a sector which is wider than the 30° of a single antenna beam (or 60° of one antenna beam provided to each of a sector and diversity port of a particular sector of receiver  803 ) is desired, alternating ones of the vertically and horizontally polarized antenna beams may be coupled to a particular port. Specifically, a sector comprised of four antenna beam widths, i.e., a 120° sector comprised of four 30° contiguous antenna beams, may be provided by SMU  801  switching a first and third antenna beam signal of antennas  810   a - 810   d , corresponding to antenna beams  1 (V) and  5 (V) of sector  1  shown in FIG. 4B, to an input of combiner  830   a , and a second and fourth antenna beam signal of antennas  810   a - 810   d , corresponding to antenna beams  3 (V) and  7 (V) of sector  1  shown in FIG. 4B, to an input of combiner  831   a . Simultaneously, SMU  802  may switch a second and fourth antenna beam signal of antennas  811   a - 811 - d , corresponding to antenna beams  4 (H) and  8 (H) of FIG. 4B, to an input of combiner  830   a , and a first and third antenna beam signal of antennas  810   a - 810   d , corresponding to antenna beams  2 (H) and  6 (H) of sector  1  shown in FIG. 5D, to an input of combiner  831   a . Accordingly the sector  1  main input of receiver  803  will be provided signals from four contiguous antenna beams, beams  1 (V),  4 (H),  5 (V), and  8 (H), having alternating polarization as among each adjacent antenna beam (vertical, horizontal, vertical, horizontal) while corresponding sector  1  diversity input of receiver  803  will be provided signals from four contiguous antenna beams, beams  2 (H),  3 (V),  6 (H), and  7 (V), having alternating polarization as among each adjacent antenna beam (horizontal, vertical, horizontal, vertical). 
     It shall be appreciated that in combining the antenna beam signals for input into a common port of receiver  803 , both angular and polarization diversity are utilized to combine only orthogonal signals. The preferred embodiment of the present invention thus avoids the need for determining a phase relationship of each antenna beam signal to be combined. Specifically, by combining alternating ones of each polarization, the results of angular diversity may be maximized as antenna beam signals possessing a common polarization signal component are offset at least two antenna beams, thereby providing increased angular diversity. Moreover, as antenna beam signals possessing orthogonal polarization signal components are provided to each sector and diversity port pair, the embodiment of FIGS. 6A and 6B provide true polarization diversity at receiver  803 . 
     Furthermore, it should be appreciated that the combining of antenna beam signals according to the present invention is not limited to antenna beams having a same phase center, i.e., beams resulting from a single antenna panel and beam forming matrix combination such as antennas  810   a - 810   d  and beam forming matrix  820   a  and antennas  811   a - 811   d  and beam forming matrix  821   a  (which according to the preferred embodiment described above with respect to collocated alternately polarized antenna elements have substantially a common phase center for all antenna beams). For example a sector could be synthesized by combining antenna beam signals formed from antennas  810   a - 810   d  and  811   a - 811   d  and antennas  810   e - 810   h  and  811   e - 811   h , if desired. As each antenna beam signal is selected to be substantially orthogonal, i.e., polarization diverse and angularly diverse or at least acutely angularly diverse, from another one of the antenna beam signals with which it is combined, exact placement of antenna panels and/or particular phase relationships of their signals is not required according to the present invention. 
     In the embodiment of FIGS. 6A and 6B, although efficient use has been made of a piece of hot standby equipment in providing the polarization diverse antenna beams, additional signal paths are shown coupling the beam forming matrixes associated with these polarization diverse antenna beams and the switch matrix utilized to couple these signals with the radio equipment. Specifically, in the embodiment of FIGS. 6A and 6B, a total of 24 signal paths are shown to allow selective coupling of any antenna beam signal to any input of receiver  803 . In the case of cellular communications, for example, the radio frequencies used are often very high, in the 800-900 MHZ range, and the receive signal strength is often very low, often on the order of milliwatts. Accordingly, low loss transmission cables, which are generally very bulky and expensive, are often used to provide a up/down mast signal path. However, 24 of these cables may be undesired because of the shear bulk or cost of such cables. Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention utilize techniques to provide acceptable signal paths as between the antennas and base station equipment. 
     Directing attention again to FIGS. 6A and 6B, one preferred technique for reducing the bulk of transmission cables as between the polarization diverse antennas and associated communication equipment is shown. Here bandpass filters  840  and  841  are disposed on either side of low noise amplifiers (LNA)  850 . Bandpass filters  840  and  841  are utilized to prevent out of band signals, such as noise and harmonics of the signals of interest, from being passed to or by LNAs  850 . LNAs  850  provide amplification of the antenna beam signals to provide an improved signal to noise characteristic with respect to the signals of interest, thus allowing their transmission through less bulky, less costly, and more lossy transmission cables. Through the use of such “tower top” LNAs, it is expected that the deploying of polarization diverse antenna beams as shown in FIGS. 6A and 6B may be accomplished utilizing a number of thin transmission cables which, when bundled, are substantially no larger than a single low loss cable expected to be in service for the remaining antenna beam signals. 
     Alternative embodiments of the present invention utilize mixing circuitry coupled to an output of selected ones of the antennas for mixing down signals received by those selected antennas. These mixed down signals may then be provided to combining circuitry in order to allow their combining for discrete transmission down mast utilizing a fewer number of cables or other signal paths than might otherwise be possible. For example, directing attention to FIG. 7A, a first preferred embodiment provides for mixing down of antenna beam signals of a first polarization to a first intermediate frequency (IF) for superimposition on the signals of a corresponding antenna beam of a second polarization which is mixed down to a second IF and, thus, the number of discrete transmission cables may be reduced. 
     As shown in FIG. 7A, antenna beam signals associated with antennas  811  are coupled to mixer  921  to be mixed with a selected local oscillator (LO) frequency provided by LO  911  to provide an intermediate frequency (IF). The frequency of LO  911  is selected such that the IF resulting from the mixing of the antenna beam signal and the LO frequency is discrete from, and preferably having a guard band there between, an IF or RF combined therewith for transmission through a common signal path. For example in the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 7A, the frequency of LO  911  is selected to provide a different IF than that resulting from the mixing of the LO frequency of LO  910  with the antenna beam signal associated with antenna  810 . Accordingly, although summed for transmission to coupled base site equipment by combiner  930 , the antenna beam signals associated with antennas  810  and  811  remain discrete. 
     It should be appreciated that the receive signal paths may include circuitry disposed therein in addition to the aforementioned mixers. For example, as shown in FIG. 7A, various filters and amplifiers may be disposed in the signal paths in order to provide improved signal quality. For example, low noise amplifiers may be disposed in the signal paths both prior to and subsequent to the mixing down of the signals to provide two stage amplification which does not suffer from the problems, such as distortion, associated with amplifying a same frequency multiple times. Similarly, filters may be utilized to discriminate between signals of interest and noise, harmonics, and images. 
     In the embodiment of FIG. 7A, the antenna beam signal associated with antenna  810  is mixed down by mixer  920  and LO  910  for combining with the antenna beam signal associated with antenna  811 . However, it should be appreciated that mixing of one of these antenna beam signals may be omitted if desired, so long as the LO frequency of the other signal, or signals, to be combined therewith is selected so as to remain discrete and recoverable therefrom. Directing attention to FIG. 7B, an alternative preferred embodiment wherein one of the antenna beam signals combined for transmission through a common signal path is not mixed down is shown. According to this embodiment, a single transmission line may be used for each vertical and horizontal pair of overlapping antenna beams shown in FIG. 4B, for example, where the horizontal beam signal is mixed down for combining with the corresponding vertical beam signal for transmission. Therefore, in addition to utilizing a standby switch matrix, such as SMU  802  described above, this embodiment also may utilize the same down mast transmission cables originally deployed for a system not having the benefit of polarization diversity according to the present invention. 
     It should be appreciated, however, that there may be advantages realized in the mixing down of multiple ones of the antenna beam signals to be combined. For example, by selecting the various LO frequencies properly, a single down mast transmission cable may be utilized for the signal path of a large number, or even all, of the antenna beam signals. Systems and methods for such antenna beam signal combining are described in detail in U.S. Pat. No. 5,859,854 entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR FREQUENCY MULTIPLEXING ANTENNA SIGNALS”, and in the above referenced patent application entitled “INDOOR DISTRIBUTED MICROCELL.”. 
     Directing attention to FIG. 7C, base site up mixing circuitry corresponding to the down mixing circuitry of FIG. 7A is shown. Here splitter  931  is provided in the common signal path in order to provide the signal for processing into the discrete signals. LO  912  and  913  are provided in the discrete signal paths associated with antenna beams of antennas  810  and  811  respectively. The frequencies of LO  912  and LO  913  are selected to correspond to those of LO  910  and LO  911  respectively in order to up mix the antenna beam signals to radio frequencies usable by the base site communication equipment. Accordingly, the antenna beam signals, although combined for transmission through a common signal path, may be provided to switch matrixes or other circuitry for selective coupling with receivers substantially as shown in FIGS. 6A and 6B. Preferably filters are included in the signal paths in order to provide only a desired IF for up mixing and/or to remove noise, harmonics, and images. 
     Shown in FIGS. 7A and 7C are transmit signal paths  941  and  942 . These signal paths provide a connection between transmit ports of base site communication equipment and antennas utilized in the forward link. As can be appreciated from the circuitry of FIGS. 7A and 7C, a particular polarization may be selected for use in the forward link, here vertical, thus utilizing polarization diversity in only one direction of the communication link. Splitter/combiner  940  is provided to couple the forward and reverse signal paths to antennas  810 . Accordingly, this embodiment of the present invention is adapted for deployment in systems initially not designed for polarization diversity and, thus, having resources to utilize such diversity at only one end of the link. It should be appreciated by one of skill in the art that polarization diversity may be utilized in the forward link in addition to or in the alternative to its use in the reverse link, substantially by replicating and reversing the circuitry shown disposed in the reverse link. 
     It shall be appreciated that the embodiments of FIGS. 7A-7C employ the use of tower top electronics, i.e., active electronic components are disposed up mast. This is generally a harsh environment subject to damage such as by lightning strike, extreme temperatures, moisture infiltration, and high winds. Accordingly, it is not uncommon for active electronic equipment so disposed to suffer from a higher failure rate than that disposed in the protective confines of a base site radio shack. 
     Accordingly, the preferred embodiment of the present invention includes adaptation to maintain operability upon failure or malfunction of the tower top electronics associated with the polarization diversity of the present invention. Specifically, bypass signal paths  950  and  960  are provided to allow communications at least through one antenna set, i.e., horizontal or vertically polarized antenna beams. In operation, when a malfunction of the tower top electronics, or even the corresponding base site electronics, is detected, switches  951  and  952  provide a signal path between antennas  810  and the base site equipment which does not include the above mentioned splitting, combining, and mixing circuitry. The down mast transmission cables so utilized may be the same as those relied upon for communicating combined signals, such as where a separate transmission cable is provided for each polarization diverse pair as described above. 
     As the up mixing circuitry is no longer required upon the routing around the mixing down circuitry, switch  961  at the base site correspondingly provides a signal path between antennas  810  and the base site equipment which does not include the above mentioned splitting and mixing circuitry. It should be appreciated that even upon the above described failure of tower top electronics, the equipment of the present invention may be utilized to provide diverse antenna beam signals, i.e., the angularly diverse antenna beam signals described above. Accordingly, although utilized to add polarization diversity, and the benefits associated therewith, to a system originally adapted for angular diversity, the present invention provides fault tolerance such that even upon a failure of circuitry associated with the signal diversity added according to the present invention, the communication system does not operate below its original design parameters. 
     The above described fault tolerance carries through to the use of the hot standby equipment as described above. Although putting into service this hot standby equipment, thus rendering it no longer “standby” equipment, a failure of either the primary or secondary piece of equipment still provides operation substantially consistent with original design parameters. For example, if SMU  801  were to fail, although SMU  802  is no longer merely a “standby” switching assembly, it provides redundancy in that an equal number of antenna beams covering a same service area as the antenna beams associated with SMU  801  remain in service. Accordingly, operation of the communication system continues substantially as that of a singularly polarized system with redundant equipment, although the antennas actually in service may have a different polarization than that of the original system design. 
     An alternative embodiment of down mixing circuitry utilized to combine antenna beam signals for transmission through a common signal path according to the present invention is shown in FIG.  8 . This embodiment of down mixing circuitry provides down mixing in two stages utilizing LO  1010  in combination with mixer  1020  as a first stage and LO  1011  in combination with mixer  1021  and mixer  1022  as a second stage. It shall be appreciated that divider  1030  is utilized with LO  1011  and mixer  1022  to provide a different IF in a portion of the second stage down conversion than that of LO  1011  and mixer  1021 . Accordingly, the antenna beam signal may be provided in two IFs. Of course, the use of two IFs may be omitted if desired, such as when a single LO is suitable for mixing down an RF signal to a signal of a desired frequency. 
     Although specific examples have been given herein utilizing receivers such as those found in cellular telephony applications, it should be appreciated that such specific examples are given to aid those of skill in the art better understand the concepts of the present invention. Accordingly, it is not intended that the present invention be limited to its use with cellular telephony receivers, digital communication equipment, cellular communication equipment, or even receivers. The principals of the present invention are useful with respect to any communication systems which may benefit from the use of signal diversity, including analogue cellular systems such as advanced mobile phone services (AMPS), in both the forward and reverse links of such communication equipment. 
     Additionally, although description has been given of the use of the present invention in three sectored communications systems, there is no such limitation to the operation of the present invention. For example, the present invention may be utilized to provide signal diversity in an omni directional system. Moreover, the present invention is not limited to any particular sector numbers or patterns, and may in fact be utilized to synthesize any sector shape, number, or orientation possible with the particular antenna beams provided by the antennas utilized. Likewise, the use of fixed orientation antenna beams is not a limitation of the present invention. The present invention may be utilized with many methods of providing wireless communication in selected areas, including the use of adaptive array antennas. 
     Although antenna systems utilizing angular diversity have been described above, it shall be appreciated that advantages of the present invention may also be realized through antenna systems adapted so as not to provide angular diversity. For example, a multiple beam sector may be adapted to provide four 120° overlapping beams according to the present invention. Signal diversity for such beams may be provided through the use of, for example, different polarization for each beam (i.e., left hand polarization for a first beam, vertical polarization for a second beam, right hand polarization for a third beam, and horizontal polarization for a fourth beam). 
     Although the present invention has been discussed with reference to reception of a transmitted signal, it shall be appreciated that the advantages of the present invention are equally advantageous for use in transmission of a signal. Systems for providing a signal to a plurality of antenna beams in the forward link are disclosed in the above referenced copending patent application Ser. No. 08/520,316, entitled “Narrow Beam Antenna Systems with Angular Diversity,” and copending patent application Ser. No. 08/520,000, entitled “System and Method for Frequency Multiplexing Antenna Signals,” each of which has been incorporated herein by reference. 
     Although the present invention and its advantages have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the scope of the present application is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments of the process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, means, methods and steps described in the specification. As one of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate from the disclosure of the present invention, processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps, presently existing or later to be developed that perform substantially the same function or achieve substantially the same result as the corresponding embodiments described herein may be utilized according to the present invention. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps.