Patents by Inventor Christopher Zappala

Christopher Zappala has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20050163197
    Abstract: A received analog spread-spectrum signal is selectively attenuated prior to digitization, where the amount of attenuation is based on the amplitude of the digitized signal before the digitized signal is filtered to compensate for interference that may exist in the received signal. By selectively attenuating the signal only when the digitized signal is relatively large, the receiver can be implemented using a relatively small analog-to-digital converter (ADC) than would otherwise be the case for a particular signal processing application. Taking advantage of the signal-concentration characteristics of spread-spectrum receivers, embodiments of the present invention can be designed to operate with signal having negative signal-to-noise ratios at the A/D conversion step.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 28, 2004
    Publication date: July 28, 2005
    Applicant: Andrew Corporation, a Delaware corporation
    Inventors: Dennis Cleary, Hayim Penso, Christopher Zappala
  • Publication number: 20050040887
    Abstract: A power amplifier's complex pre-distortion curve is generated by decomposing a representation of an input signal, processing the resulting decomposed signals using analog techniques, and performing signal re-composition. In one implementation, two different halves of a transfer function corresponding to the amplitude characteristics of the amplifier are separately modeled and then combined to generate a control signal used to control a voltage-controlled attenuator that attenuates the input signal, while two different halves of a transfer function corresponding to the amplifier's phase characteristics are separately modeled and then combined to generate a different control signal used to control a voltage-controlled phase shifter that adjusts the phase of the input signal. The resulting output signal corresponds to an amplitude-and-phase pre-distorted signal that can be applied to linearize a corresponding (high power) amplifier.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 22, 2003
    Publication date: February 24, 2005
    Applicant: Andrew Corporation, a Delaware corporation
    Inventor: Christopher Zappala