Title: Wireless Technologies Review: Satellite RF Fundamentals
1Wireless Technologies ReviewSatellite RF
Fundamentals
2Announcements
- Class web site http//teal.gmu.edu/coursepages.htm
and click on TCOM 690 sect 3or go directly
tohttp//teal.gmu.edu/ececourses/tcom690/fall2003
/sect3/TCOM690-3-fall03.htm - Email ebonilla_at_gmu.edu
- Open your GMU email account
- Make sure I have your correct email address
- Question of the Day What is the most important
quality or asset that you bring to your clients
and/or employer as a telecommunications
professional?
3Objectives
- Review fundamental concepts of wireless
communications. - Provide basics of RF communications related to
the operation of spacecraft. - Information provided will allow you to understand
and perform an RF link calculation. - Enable you to do basic link calculations for the
course project.
4Satellite RF Communications Architecture
5Subsystems of Satellite RF Communications
AtmosphericLoss,Rain Loss
PointingLoss
SpaceLoss
PolarizationLoss
PointingLoss
Transmitter
Receiver
SPACECHANNEL
Galactic, Star,Terrestrial Noise
Antenna
Antenna
Power Amplifier
Receiver Noise
Receiver
Transmitter
ImplementationLoss
Modulator
Demodulator
Information Source
Information Sink
Satellite transmitter-to-receiver link with
typical loss and noise sources
6Definitions Some Basics
- dB 10 log10 (x) x is usually a power ratio
- dBW ? 10 log10 (watts)
- For 100 watts dBW 10 log10 (100) 20 dBW
- dBm ? 10 log10 (milliwatts)
- For 100 watts dBm 10 log10 (100000) 50 dBm
- Carrier Frequency
- Units are Hz
- MHz Hz x 106
- GHz Hz x 10 9
- Frequency Bands (of interest)
- S-Band 2-3 GHz
- X-Band 7-8 GHz
- Ku-Band 13-15 GHz
- Ka-Band 23-28 GHz
7Logarithmic Scale
dBW
dBm
20 dBW
50 dBm
100 Watts
Always a 30 dB difference between dBm and dBW
13 dBW
43 dBm
20 Watts
10 dBW
40 dBm
10 Watts
0 dBW (Ref)
30 dBm
1 Watts
-10 dBW
20 dBm
0.1 Watts
-30 dBW
0 dBm (Ref)
0.001 Watts(1 milliwatt)
-40 dBW
-10 dBm
0.0001 Watts
A power below the reference level has negative
value, for either dBm or dBW
8What is Doppler Doppler Rate?
B
A
C
AOS
LOS
ORBIT
EARTH
Doppler Rate
Doppler Shift
? f
C
A
B
Nominal (at-rest) frequency
- ? f
Vs Radial velocity component between S/C and
Site in the direction of the observer
C Speed of Light 2.997925 x 108 meters/sec.
Fs Frequency of Transmission
Doppler shifts become greater as the frequencies
become higher.
where as rate of change of Vs acceleration
9Doppler Doppler Rate
- Phase lock loops
- Enable receiving tracking of Doppler shifted
signals - Used in virtually all spacecraft ground station
designs to accommodate dynamic frequency changes
Error Signal
Phase Frequency Comparer
Input Signal Doppler
Low PassFilter
FilteredErrorSignal
VoltageControlledOscillator
10Analog and Digital Data
11Analog and Digital Data
- Most instrument data starts out as analog data
- Most analog data is converted to digital data
(binary 2n) - 3 bit system
Volts
7
6
5
4
time
Binary 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1
0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1
Analog 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
12Analog and Digital Data
- Why use digital data
- Better performance vs. noise
- Lends itself to computer processing coding
- Consumes more bandwidth
Volts
Analog Signal
t
Sampling Rate ? Nyquist rate (? 2 fmax) fmax
max frequency component of the original signal
Digital Sampling
t
Digital Bit Stream
t
13Spectra Basics
14Spectra (Baseband Signals)
Frequency Domain
Time Domain
A
Amplitude
V(t) Asin2?ft
t
Hz
Period T
15Spectra (Modulated Signal)
- Given an arbitrary modulating signal M(t)an
arbitrary carrier signal cos 2?fctthen the
modulated signal V(t) ? M(t) cos 2?fct - Find The Fourier transform of V(t)
- using the identity
- Then
- Then The Fourier transform of V(t) V(f)
A
M(0)
f
fm
-fm
0
½ M(0)
½ M(0)
f
-fc
0
fc
16Coding/Spreading/Data Compression
17The Effects of Channel Noise
- In digital communications, raw data is put into
the form of bits, 1s and 0s. - A carrier signal is modulated using this raw data
for convenient transmission over the channel. - The carrier signal is subject to noise corruption
in the channel, sometimes making it impossible to
reconstruct the raw bits at the receiver. - If a transmitted bit is received as its opposite
(e.g., a 1 received as a 0 or vice versa), then a
bit error has occurred. - This results in a progressive loss of information
at the receiver as the number of mistranslated
bits grows.
18BER and Eb/No
- The rate at which bits are corrupted beyond the
capacity to reconstruct them is called the BER
(Bit Error Rate). - A BER of less than 1 in 100,000 bits is generally
desired for an average satellite communications
channel (also referred to as a BER of 10-5). - For some types of data, an even smaller BER is
desired (10-7). - The BER is directly dependent on the Eb/No, which
is the Bit Energy-to-Noise Density ratio. - Since the noise density present on the channel is
difficult to control, this basically means that
BER can be reduced through using a higher powered
signal, or by controlling other parameters to
increase the energy transmitted per bit. - As the following chart shows, the BER will
decrease (i.e., fewer errors) if the Eb/No
increases.
19Higher Eb/No Reduces the BER
BER Versus Eb/No
10-3
Some ways of Increasing Eb/No
10-4
- Increase signal power
- Use a bigger antenna
- Use a super cooled receiver
BER
10-5
These methods can be expensive
10-6
Eb/No
lower
higher
20Another Strategy to Reduce BER
BER Versus Eb/No
10-3
Another strategy is to shift the whole curve over
to the left
10-4
This change in performance can be achieved by
using Error Correction Coding
Now the same BER can be achieved using a lower
Eb/No
BER
10-5
Less expensive method of mitigating channel noise
10-6
Eb/No
lower
higher
21Error Detecting versus Error Detecting/Correcting
Codes
- An error detecting code can only detect the
presence of errors, not correct them. - This implies error detection and a subsequent
request for retransmission. - There are times when retransmission of the
message is not practical. - If a spacecraft is transmitting a playback dump
of a storage device while making a short pass
over a ground station, it may not have time to
stop the transmission and retransmit in a short
enough time. - An error detecting/correcting code, on the other
hand, has the ability to detect a defined number
of errors and correct them for a prescribed
environment that caused the errors, which is
commonly called Forward Error Correction (FEC). - Usually, for a given code, more errors can be
detected than can actually be corrected.
22Error Correction Codes
- Error control coding aims to correct errors
caused by noise and interference in a digital
communications scheme. - In error control coding, the information bits are
represented as another sequence of bits, also
called coded symbols this new sequence is sent
over the channel. - This new sequence will use redundant information,
often called parity bits, to provide error
protection (e.g., send a 0 as 00000 and a 1 as
11111). - Now individual bit errors will not necessarily
result in the incorrect decoding of the original
information bits. - For instance, if 1 or 2 of the five 0s sent
over the channel in the above example are
interpreted as 1s at the receiver, the original
0 can still be decoded correctly if one makes a
final decision based on the majority of the
received coded symbols.
23Types of Error Correction Codes
- A rate 1/2 convolutional code, an example of one
family of codes, is often used on NASA space
communication links. - 2 coded symbols for every 1 data symbol (i.e.,
100 overhead) - Provides improved performance in a Gaussian noise
environment - The Reed-Solomon code, a special type of block
code, also has the advantage of smaller bandwidth
expansion and also has the capability to indicate
the presence of uncorrectable errors. - Provides improved performance in a bursty noise
environment - Overhead approximately 12
- Where a greater coding gain is needed than can be
provided by the convolutional code or the
Reed-Solomon code alone, the two codes are often
concatenated to provide a higher error-correction
performance. - One code serves as the outer code, one as the
inner code
24Typical Encoded Link
BasebandSignal
RFSignal
Data symbols 1.12 Msps
Data symbols 2.24 Msps
Data Bits 1 Mbps
Rate ½ Convolutional Encoder
Modulator Transmitter
R/SEncoder
LNA
fc
Antenna
Antenna
Receiver
Data symbols 2.24 Msps
Convolutional Decoder
2 MHz
Data symbols 1.12 Msps
R/SDecoder
Note Coding increases the bandwidth of the
baseband RF signal
Data Bits 1 Mbps(with some errors)
25Example Error Correcting Performance
- For a BER of 10-5, Theoretical Required Eb/N0 is
as follows - Uncoded PSK 9.6 dB
- Reed-Solomon (R-S) Coding 6.0 dB
- Convolutional Coding (7,1/2) PSK 4.4 dB
- Convolutional R-S (no R-S interleave) 3.0
dB - Convolutional R-S (ideal R-S interleave)
2.4 dB - (7,1/2), where rate 1/2 indicates that for every
1 bit into the encoder 2 symbols are output of
the encoder and 7 is the number of shift
registers used to generate the output symbol of
the encoder. - Interleaving takes adjacent bits and separates
them to help protect from interference.
26Data Compression
- Data transmission and storage cost money.
- Despite this, digital data are generally stored
in efficient ways such as ASCII text or binary
code. - These encoding methods require data files about
twice as large as actually needed to represent
the information. - Data compression is the general term for the
various algorithms and programs developed to
address this problem. - A compression program converts data from an
easy-to-use format for one optimized for
compactness. Basically it discards redundant
data with a prescribed algorithm. - An uncompression program returns the information
to its original form. - As an example of compression, a fax device
compresses the data before it sends it to reduce
the time needed to transmit the document. - This can reduce the cost of transmission 10 or
more times. - Compression will be required for the Design
Project Problem.
27Spread Spectrum Definition
- Spread Spectrum (SS) was developed originally as
an anti-jamming technique. - A jamming signal is a narrowband, high power
signal which falls in the bandwidth of the
desired signal, thus disrupting communications - Jamming can be intentional, or it can result from
natural phenomena such as multipath. - SS works by spreading the desired signal over a
much larger bandwidth, Wss, much in excess of the
minimum bandwidth W necessary to send the
information. - A spreading signal, or coding signal, which is
independent of the data, is used to accomplish
spreading. - At the receiver, the original data is recovered
through a process called despreading, in which a
synchronized replica of the spreading signal is
correlated with the received spread signal. - Spreading used in the NASA Tracking and Data
Relay Satellite (TDRS) - Reduce flux density of signals to meet Spectrum
Management requirements. - Provide isolation for signals on same frequency.
28Basic Spread Spectrum Technique Direct Sequence
- Multiplication by the spreading signal once
spreads the signal bandwidth. - Multiplication by the spreading signal twice
recovers the original signal. - The desired signal gets multiplied twice, but the
jamming signal gets multiplied only once. - g(t) must be deterministic, since it must be
generated at both the transmitter and receiver,
yet it must appear random to authorized
listeners. - Generally g(t) is generated as a pre-defined
pseudo-random sequence of 1s and 1s through the
use of prescribed shift registers.
29Spreading Effect of Spread Spectrum
G(f)
Jammer with total power J JO J/W
Before Spreading
w
Gss(f)
J'o Jo (W/Wss)
After Spreading
wss
30Spreading Overview of Various Spreading
Techniques
- Direct Sequencing (DS) is the SS technique
described above. - Allows separation between desired signals all at
the same frequency polarization - Aids in meeting required flux density regulations
- Enables range determination of spacecraft
- Rule of thumb spreading chip rate x 10 of
symbol (data) rate - In Frequency Hopping (FH), the frequency spectrum
of the desired signal is shifted pseudorandomly
over M different frequencies. - Each hop lasts a very short time, making the
presence of a jamming signal in any one hopped
frequency band much less effective. - FS is still a form of SS, as it requires greatly
expanded bandwidth to operate. - Time Hopping (TH) uses a coded sequence to turn
the transmitter on and off in a pseudorandom
fashion to counter a pulsed jamming signal. - Requires, not more bandwidth, but a greater time
duration for transmission. - Not effective against continuous wave jammers, so
it is usually combined with other techniques. - Hybrids of the three techniques above are often
used. - DS/FH, FH/TH, or DS/FH/TH are examples.
31Modulation Schemes
32Definition of Modulation
- Modulate means to change something
- In telecommunications, it means to change the
amplitude, frequency or phase of the carrier
signal. - Digital symbols (usually bits) are transformed
into waveforms by a process called digital
modulation. - These digital waveforms are then used to modulate
the carrier. - The following slide shows some commonly used
Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) waveforms. - Definition Baseband signals are those signals
that are used to modulate a high frequency
carrier signal.
33Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) Waveforms
34Motivation for Modulation
- It would be very difficult to send a baseband
signal directly over a channel because antennas
are used to transmit electromagnetic fields
through space. - The size of an antenna depends on the wavelength
of the signal to be transmitted. - Often the antenna size is taken to be ?/4.
- A baseband signal has a relatively low frequency
and therefore a very large wavelength that is
calculated as c/f, where c is the speed of light
and f is the frequency. - An antenna might need to be unacceptably long to
directly transmit a baseband signal. - If the baseband information is first modulated on
a high frequency carrier, then the required
antenna diameter will be much more reasonable. - In addition, by modulating carriers at different
frequencies, more than one baseband signal may be
sent over the same channel, thus increasing data
throughput. This is call frequency multiplexing
(similar to current radio and TV broadcasting).
35The Carrier Wave/How to Modulate
- The general form of a carrier wave iss(t)
A(t) cos wct ø(t) - wc carrier freqA(t) amplitudeø(t) phase
- The carrier can be modulated by using the
baseband signal to vary one or more of the above
parameters over a duration of T, the symbol
period. - Coherent modulation may be used when the receiver
can exploit knowledge of the actual carrier
phase. - Noncoherent modulation is used when knowledge of
the absolute phase is unavailable. - Less complicated, but comes with a performance
degradation.
S(t)
Modulator
fc
fc reference
36QPSK versus BPSK
- BPSK modulation results in 1 symbol/Hz, where
QPSK modulation results in 2 symbols/Hz). - As a result, the spectrum of QPSK is narrower
than that of BPSK. - The mainlobe of QPSK is half the width of the
BPSK spectrum mainlobe. - The probabilities of bit error for BPSK and QPSK
are equal, but QPSK can support twice the data
rate that BPSK can. - Higher orders of PSK can be designed (8-PSK,
16-PSK, etc.), but there is a tradeoff (higher
required power or higher BER).
37Comparison of Spectra for BPSK and QPSK for a
Given Data Rate
BPSK
QPSK
Bandwidth Difference
Coding Gain
Coding Gain
Bandwidth Difference
1a
BPSK 1 180 DEGREES 0 0 DEGREES
I
Q
Inphase and Quadrature biphase signals
1b
0a
Two states for BPSK
QPSK Delay Data by 90 degrees on 1 channel
Four states for QPSK
1
0
0b
38Noise Basics
39Sources of System Noise
- The presence of noise degrades the performance of
a satellite link - The noise present in a satellite communications
system (often called the system noise) comes
from many different sources - Some of it is injected via the antenna from
external sources - Some of the noise is generated internally by
various receiver components - The noise which comes in through the antenna can
be seen as random noise emissions from different
sources, and it is also called the sky noise - Terrestrial sources such as lightning, radio
emissions, and the atmosphere - Solar radiation
- Galactic background (moon, stars, etc.)
- The receiver-generated noise can be caused by
various receiver components - Results from thermal noise caused by the motion
of electrons in all conductors - The principal components that generate noise are
the active devices such as LNA and random noise
stemming from passive elements, such as the line
from the antenna to the receiver
40Noise Temperature of a Device
- Noise temperature is a useful concept in
communications receivers, since it provides a way
of determining how much thermal noise is
generated by active and passive devices in the
receiving system - The physical noise temperature of a device, Tn,
results in a noise power of Pn KTnB - K Boltzmanns constant 1.38 x 10-23 J/K K in
dBW -228.6 dBW/K - Tn Noise temperature of source in Kelvins
- B Bandwidth of power measurement device in
hertz - Because satellite communications systems work
with weak signals, it is mandatory to reduce the
noise in the receiver as far as possible - Generally the receiver bandwidth is made just
large enough to pass the signal, in order to
minimize noise power
41The System Noise Temperature
- To determine the performance of a receiving
system, we must find the total thermal noise
against which the signal must be demodulated. - The combination of all the noisy devices plus the
antenna noise. - This can be done by representing the receiver
components as noiseless devices with their
individual gains and, at their inputs, noise
sources with the same noise power as the original
noisy components. - The next slide shows how this is done for an
earth station receiver. - It is then easy mathematically to combine all of
the noise sources into one noise source, located
at the input of a noiseless receiver. - The noise temperature of this source, Ts, is
called the system noise temperature. - The total noise power can then be calculated
easily, for link budget purposes, as Pn KTsBG. - G is the total gain of the receiver.
- B is the bandwidth of interest.
42Noise Figure and the G/T Figure of Merit
- Noise figure can also be used to specify the
noise generated within a device - NF (S/N)in/(S/N)out
- The noise figure of a device is related to its
noise temperature by - Td T0(NF - 1), where T0, the reference
temperature, is usually 290 K (room temperature) - NFdB 3 dB NF 103/10 2
- Td 290 (2-1) 290 K
- The receiver gain and the system noise
temperature can be combined as a ratio, Gr/Ts,
often just written as G/T - For example, if the receive antenna is 50 dBi and
the system noise temperature is 500 K , then
Gr/Ts 50-10log (500) ? 23.0 dB/ K - The G/T is often used as a figure of merit for an
earth station - As G/T goes up, so does the quality of the earth
station
43The Calculation of System Noise Temperature
(Contd)
3 dB
DEMODULATOR
IF AMP
RECEIVER
Tsky 50
Loss L
NFR 10 dB 10 GR 30 dB
NFDC 10 dB 10 GDC 30 dB
NFLNA 3 dB 2 GLNA 30 dB
NFIF 10 dB 10 GIF 30 dB
Ts _at_ Reference Point
System Noise Temperature ? Ts K
To is reference temperature of each device
290K (assumed)
?462 K
44Components
45Components of Interest
- Antennas
- Receive transmit RF (radio frequency) energy
- Size/type selected directly related to
frequency/required gain
Gain Pattern
Directional (Hi-Gain) Antenna
Omni Antenna (idealized)
Isotropic antenna
Omni Antenna (typical)
Gain is relative to isotropic with units of dBi
46Components of Interest (Contd)
- Antennas (contd)
- Polarization the orientation of the electrical
field vector specifically, the figure traced as
a function of time by the extremity of the vector
at a fixed location in space, as observed along
the direction of propagation - To minimize polarization loss, the transmit and
receive antennas should have the same
polarization.
Linear Polarization Vertical
Linear PolarizationHorizontal
Circular Polarization Left hand
Circular PolarizationRight hand
47Components of Interest (Contd)
Band Pass Filter
A
A
f1 f2
f
f
f1
f2
Receive fr
fr (2106.4 MHz)
ft (2287.5 MHz)
Transmit ft
- Diplexer provides isolation between transmit
receive signals
48Components of Interest (Contd)
- Transmitters (modulators) Receivers
(demodulators)
Transmitter
Receiver
Original Signal
Original Signal
A
A
f
fc
fc
- Transponders Transceivers
Switch
Transponder Mode
Transceiver Mode
Power AmplifierG 13 dB
Transmitter
1 watt (0 dBW)
20 watt (13 dBW)
49Link Equation and Examples(Stop Here)
50Link Equation
- For an isotropic antenna in free space
conditions, the power supplied to the antenna,
PT, is uniformly distributed on the surface of a
sphere of which the antenna is the center - The power flux-density is the power radiated by
the antenna in a given direction at a
sufficiently large distance, d, per unit of
surface area is - The power flux-density radiated in a given
direction by antenna having a gain, GT, in that
direction is - The equivalent isotropically radiated power
(EIRP) PT GT - The power received by an antenna with area AR is
- The gain of any antenna, for example GR, is
51Link Equation (Contd)
PT
d
GT
Receiving Antenna Area AR
HypotheticalSphere
52Link Equation
where K Boltzmanns constant 1.38 x 10-23
J/K K in dBW -228.6 dBW/K T system noise
temperature in Kelvins
- The power received to noise density is related to
the data rate by the energy per bit as follows - The actual Eb/N0 can be compared to the required
Eb/N0 to see how much margin the system
contains. - If the margin is not high enough, or is less than
0 dB, then, using the link budget, a system
engineer can easily determine how the
communication system needs to be improved to
achieve the desired performance.
where
is related to BER (see theoretical curves for
given modulation and coding scheme)
53Link Budget Analysis
- A link budget is an engineering tool for
satellite communication systems, used to
demonstrate and analyze link performance - Generally the desired end result is Bit Error
Rate (BER), or the Eb/N0 required to achieve a
desired BER - Link performance is analyzed in terms of
- Transmit power
- Antenna parameters (e.g. gain)
- Received system noise levels (usually specified
as noise temperature) - Other factors (e.g. propagation losses,
interference, intermodulation) - As for any budget, numbers are added and
subtracted together in a table format, with the
bottom line at the bottom - Factors that contribute to a higher Eb/N0 are
added as positive numbers, like credits - Factors that contribute to a lower Eb/N0 are
added as negative numbers, like debits
54Additional Losses on a Real Satellite Link
- On an ideal link, the only power loss term would
be the path loss caused by the dispersion of the
transmit power over the transmitter-to-receiver
range. - For a real satellite communications link, many
other losses need to be considered as well. - Polarization loss, caused by the a mismatch
between the transmitting and receiving antennas. - Rain attenuation and atmospheric loss.
- The receiver implementation loss.
- Pointing loss, caused by imperfect pointing of
the antennas - Miscellaneous other losses.
- In the link budget, these losses are sometimes
listed as line items subtracted from the received
power, but some of them may be combined in
different ways.
55Sample Link Budget (direct to ground)
S Losses 0.67 dB Polarization loss 178.95 dB
space loss _at_ 2575 KM and 5? elevation 0.45 dB
atmospheric loss 1.2 dB rain loss
11m Ground Antenna
SPACE
I 75 MBPS
Loss 1.13 dB
Encoder Transmitter
LNA
Receiver
Gain 4.84 dBi
G/T 33.3 dB/K
Q 75 MBPS
data
11.6 dBW
10.49 dBW
EIRP 15.31 dBW
I
Q
Decoder
Implementation Loss 2.0 dB
Decoded Data
Alaska SAR Facility 11 meter antenna
MARGIN 5.94 dB
56Example Link Budget (direct to ground)
DOWNLINK MARGIN CALCULATION
GSFC C.L.A.S.S. ANALYSIS 1 DATE TIME
4/ 1/99 101339 PERFORMED BY Y.WONG
LINKID
EOS-AM/SGS
FREQUENCY 8212.5 MHz
RANGE 2575.0 km
MODULATION QPSK
I CHANNEL
Q CHANNEL
---------
--------- DATA RATE
75000.000 kbps DATA RATE 75000.000
kbps CODING RATE 1/2
CODED CODING RATE 1/2 CODED
BER 1.00E-05
BER 1.00E-05
99.95 AVAILABILITY GR EL5
DEGREES PARAMETER
VALUE
REMARKS ------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------
------------------------------- 01. USER
SPACECRAFT TRANSMITTER POWER - dBW 11.60
NOTE A EOL 02. USER
SPACECRAFT PASSIVE LOSS - dB 1.13
NOTE A 03. USER SPACECRAFT
ANTENNA GAIN - dBi 4.84
NOTE A include multipath loss 04.
USER SPACECRAFT POINTING LOSS - dB
.00 NOTE A 05. USER
SPACECRAFT EIRP - dBWi 15.31
1 - 2 3 - 4 06.
POLARIZATION LOSS - dB
.67 NOTE A 07. FREE SPACE
LOSS - dB 178.95
NOTE B 08. ATMOSPHERIC LOSS - dB
.45
NOTE B EL 5.0 DEG 09. RAIN ATTENUATION -
dB 1.20
Include Scintillation loss 1.1 dB 10.
MULTIPATH LOSS - dB
.00 NOTE A 11. GROUND
STATION G/T - dB/DEGREES-K 33.30
G/T with rain at 5 degrees
12. BOLTZMANN'S CONSTANT - dBW/(HzK)
-228.60 CONSTANT 13.
RECEIVED CARRIER TO NOISE DENSITY - dB/Hz
95.95 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10
11 - 12
I CHANNEL Q CHANNEL
--------- --------- 14. I-Q CHANNEL
POWER SPLIT LOSS - dB 3.01
3.01 NOTE B 1.00 TO 1.00 15.
MODULATION LOSS - dB
.20 .20 NOTE A 16. DATA RATE
- dB-bps 78.75
78.75 NOTE A 17. DIFFERENTIAL
ENCODING/DECODING LOSS - dB .20
.20 NOTE A 18. USER CONSTRAINT LOSS -
dB 1.60 1.60
2 dB Includes diff encoding and
modulation losses 19.
RECEIVED Eb/No - dB
12.19 12.19 13 - 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 -
18 20. IMPLEMENTATION LOSS - dB
2.00 2.00 21.
REQUIRED Eb/No - dB
4.25 4.25 I NOTE B Q NOTE B
22. REQUIRED PERFORMANCE MARGIN - dB
3.00 3.00 NOTE A 23. MARGIN
- dB 2.94
2.94 19 - 20 - 21 - 22
NOTE A PARAMETER VALUE FROM USER PROJECT -
SUBJECT TO CHANGE NOTE B FROM CLASS
ANALYSIS IF COMPUTED
57TDRSS Return Link Power Received
- For ease of calculation, TDRSS defines the
relationship between data rate and the signal
power level received isotropically at TDRS (Prec)
for a Bit Error Rate of 10-5 - Ideal required Prec RbdB K
- For rate 1/2 coded signals, assume K -221.8
(MA) -231.6 (SSA) -245.2 (KuSA) -247.6 (KaSA) - Due to defining the Prec isotropically at TDRS,
the predicted received power is calculated the
same as identified earlier (see Link Equation
slide) however, GR is set to 1 ( 0 dB) for the
isotropic antenna. (i.e., Prec Pr
GRGTPT(?/4?R)2 Watts) - In dB, this can be expressed as PR GR GT PT
20Log(?/4?R) dBW - Margin Predicted Prec Ideal Prec Other
Losses - Other Losses are treated as debits and encompass
items such as polarization loss (mismatch of the
transmit polarization with receiving
polarization), pointing loss (inability of
transmit antenna to point to receiving antenna),
incompatibility loss, and interference
degradation.
58Example Simple TDRS Link Budget using Prec
Equation
RETURN LINK CALCULATION --
NETWORK SYSTEMS ENGINEER ANALYSIS GSFC
C.L.A.S.S. ANALYSIS 0 DATE TIME
03/03/03 10 131 PERFORMED BY R. BROCKDORFF
USERID EOS-AM LINKID KSA8L
RELAY SYS. TDRS-East TO STGT
SERVICE FREQUENCY DATA GROUP/MODE POLAR
RANGE CASE ALTITUDE ELEVATION
RANGE KuSA 15003.4 MHz DG-2 MODE-2A
LCP MAXIMUM 710.6 Km 1.5 Deg
44592.7 Km ---------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------
----------- I CHANNEL
Q CHANNEL
DATA RATE 75000.00 KBPS
DATA RATE 75000.00 KBPS
MOD TYPE QPSK MOD
TYPE QPSK SYMBL FMT
NRZ-M SYMBL FMT NRZ-M
RATE 1/2 CODED
RATE 1/2 CODED
-----------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------
--------------- SPACE-SPACE LINK
NOTES --------------------------------------------
---------- --------------------------
------ 1 USER TRANSMIT POWER, dBW
12.00 User Provided Data
2 PASSIVE LOSS, dB
1.80 User Provided Data
3 USER ANTENNA GAIN, dBi
44.30 User Provided Data
4 POINTING LOSS, dB
2.20 User Provided Data
5 USER EIRP, dBW
52.30 (1)-(2)(3)-(4)
6 SPACE LOSS, dB
208.95 CLASS Analysis
7 ATMOSPHERIC LOSS, dB
0.00 Not Considered
8 MULTIPATH LOSS, dB
0.00 Not Considered
9 POLARIZATION LOSS, dB
0.10 User Provided
Data 10 SSL RAIN ATTENUATION, dB
0.00 User
Provided Data 11 Prec AT INPUT TO
TDRS, dBW -156.75
(5)-(6)-(7)-(8)-(9)-(10) 12 Required Prec
AT INPUT TO TDRS, dBW -163.44
-245.2 10log (Data Rate) 13 DYNAMICS
LOSS, dB 0.00
Not Considered 14 USER
CONSTRAINT LOSS, dB 0.00
CLASS Analysis 15 RFI
LOSS, dB 0.00
CLASS Analysis 16
MARGIN, dB
6.69 (11)-(12)-(13)-(14)-(15)
- Slight difference in simplified link budget vs
detailed link budget due to exact customer
configuration and space-to-ground link effects
59Sample Link budget (thru TDRS)
QPSK
S Losses 0.10 dB Polarization loss 208.95 dB
space loss _at_ 44592.7 KM and 1.5? elevation
15003.4 MHz
Loss 2.2 dB
I 75 MBPS
Loss 1.8 dB
Encoder Transmitter
Space
Gain 44.30 dBi
Q 75 MBPS
Space Ground Link
EIRP 52.30 dBW
Transparent to the link budget when using the
ideal Prec equation
12 dBW
10.2 dBW
QPSK
LNA
Prec is defined here for a unity gain antenna and
BER 10-5 Predicted Prec -156.75 dBW Ideal
Required Prec -163.44 dBW Margin 6.69 dB
Receiver
data
I 150 Msps
Q 150 Msps
Decoder
Note Significantly more EIRP needed as compared
to a direct downlink (52.3 vs. 15.31 dBW)
Decoded Data
60Geometric Coverage (Ground)
Florida ground station with spacecraft altitudes
400, 800, and 1200 km
Merritt Island
Elevation angle is the angle between local
horizontal at ground station and spacecraft
61Geometric Coverage (Ground)
Ground station elevation angles of 0, 10, and 20
degrees
Merritt Island
62Geometric Coverage (Ground)
Spacecraft altitude 1200 km
Merritt Island
Another antenna
Building
Antenna limits
Effects of terrain and antenna limitations Elevati
on angel 0
63Geometric Coverage (Ground)
Coverage circle for Svalbard at a spacecraft
altitude of 400 km
Svalbard Location
0 elevation angel
64Geometric Coverage (Ground)
Spacecraft Orbit of 400 KM, 65 deg inc circular
Hawaii (HAW3), Alaska (AGIS), Wallops Island
(WPSA), Svalbard (SGIS), McMurdo (MCMS)
Svalbard
AGIS
WPSA
HAW3
MCMS
65Geometric Coverage (Ground)
Spacecraft Orbit of 400 KM, 98 deg inc circular
Hawaii (HAW3), Alaska (AGIS), Wallops Island
(WPSA), Svalbard (SGIS), McMurdo (MCMS)
AGIS
WPSA
HAW3
66Geometric Coverage (TDRS)
Synchronous Satellite Coverage at 319 deg long
Synsat location
Coverage
No coverage
Spacecraft height 500 km
67TDRS Basics
68NASAs Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS)
- The TDRSs are in geosynchronous orbit at
allocated longitudes - A geostationary satellite is in a circular orbit
parallel to and 35786.43 km above the equator
with an angular velocity that matches that of the
earth. - It hovers above a fixed point on the equator and
therefore appears to be motionless. - A geosynchronous satellite has the same orbit
period as a geostationary satellite, but its
orbit may be elliptical and inclined. - A geosynchronous satellite in an inclined
circular orbit moves in a figure-8 pattern as
viewed from earth. - To maintain a geosynchronous orbit, a satellite
must periodically make east-west corrections or
it will drift in longitude. - The TDRSs, along with supporting ground systems,
make up NASAs Space Network. - The Space Network was established to act as a
bent-pipe relay (i.e., repeater) and dramatically
increase coverage to low earth orbiting
satellites as compared to a worldwide network of
ground stations. - The SN dramatically increased tracking and data
acquisition (TDA) coverage from 15 to 85 per
orbit of low earth orbiting spacecraft as well as
decreased operational costs (see coverage slides
for depiction). - Requires 30 dB additional EIRP vs direct to
ground - Today, 100 line-of-sight coverage can be
provided to LEO customers. - Use of 2 TDRS constellation has a Zone of
Exclusion (ZOE) - Use of 3 TDRS constellation does not have ZOE
69TDRSS Constellation
WHITE SANDS COMPLEX
GUAM REMOTE GROUND TERMINAL
F-5 174W TDW
F-7 171W (in storage)
TDRS-8 170.7W
F-1 049W
F-6 047W TDS
F-4 041W TDE
TDRS-I 149.5W
F-3 275W TDZ
TDRS-J 150W
McMurdo Ground StationMcMurdo TDRS Relay
System(McMurdo, Antarctica)
70TDRSS FIELDS OF VIEW
WHITE
SANDS
COMPLEX
GUAM
254
94
TDW
174 TDW
321
41 TDE
121
355
195
127
47 TDS
275 TDZ
327
91
251
F-7
171 F-7
0/360
180W
-180W
TDRS VIEWS BASED ON 600KM USER ALTITUDE AT THE
EQUATOR
71TDRSS Ground Segment
- TWO FUNCTIONALLY IDENTICAL, GEOGRAPHICALLY
SEPARATED GROUND TERMINALS AT THE WHITE SANDS
TEST FACILITY - THE WHITE SANDS COMPLEX (WSC) HAS FIVE SPACE TO
GROUND LINK TERMINALS (SGLTs) - A SIXTH SGLT HAS BEEN INSTALLED AT THE REMOTE
GROUND TERMINAL ON GUAM AS AN EXTENDED WSC SGLT - DATA SERVICES MANAGEMENT CENTER
- OPERATIONAL HUB LOCATED AT WSC FOR COORDINATING
ALL SPACE NETWORK ACTIVITIES BETWEEN CUSTOMERS
AND SN
72Space Segment Tracking and Data Relay Satellite
(F1 - F7)
Solar array Power output is approximately 1800
watts
Single Access Antenna Dual frequency
communications and tracking functions S-band
TDRSS (SSA) K-band TDRSS (KSA) K-band
auto-tracking 4.9 meter shaped reflector
assembly SA equipment compartment mounted behind
reflector Two axis gimballing
Omni Antenna (S-band) and Solar Sail
Space-to-Ground-Link Antenna TDRS downlink 2.0
meter parabolic reflector Dual orthogonal linear
polarization TDRS single horn feed orthomode
transducer Two axis gimballed
Multiple Access Antenna 30 helices 12 diplexers
for transmit 30 receive body mounted Single
commanded beam, transmit 20 adapted beams for
receive Ground implemented receive function
- Forward (FWD) link from TDRSS Ground Station
through TDRS to Customer Spacecraft - Return (RTN) link from Customer Spacecraft
through TDRS to TDRSS Ground Station
73Multiple Access (MA) vs Single Access (SA)
- Multiple Access (MA)
- Fixed S-band frequency (2106.4 MHz fwd and 2287.5
MHz rtn) - Fixed polarization (left hand circular)
- Low data rate (lt 300 kbps)
- Forward service operations are time-shared
amongst customers - Return service supports multiple customers
simultaneously (lower service cost to customer
vs SA) - Phased array antenna and beamforming equipment
allow for spatial discrimination between
customers PN spreading provides additional
discrimination - Return Demand Access Service allows customers to
have a dedicated return link continuously (lower
service cost to customer) - Single Access (SA)
- Multiple frequency bands (S-band, Ku-band,
Ka-band) - S-band selectable frequency (2025.8 2117.9 MHz
fwd 2200-2300 MHz rtn) - Ku-band fixed frequency (13775 MHz fwd 15003.4
MHz rtn) - Ka-band selectable frequency (22550-23550 MHz
fwd 25250-27500 MHz rtn) - S-band and K-band simultaneously
- Selectable polarization (left or right hand
circular) - High data rate (up to 300 Mbps)
- Forward service operations are time-shared
amongst customers - Return service operations are time-shared amongst
customers (higher service cost to customer vs MA)
74Data Rates Associated with Space Network Services
75Spectrum Management
76Purpose of Spectrum Management
- Ensure that the system in which time and money
has been invested to develop provides the
required quality of service (i.e., Bit Error
Rate) when it is deployed or installed. - Apply order to the use of the orbit/spectrum
resource. - Provide technical bases for coordination.
- Ensure that systems operate as intended.
- Promote the efficient use of the radio frequency
spectrum. - Accommodate new services, applications and
technology.
77Frequency Allocations
- The radio frequency spectrum is a national and
international resource whose use is governed by
Federal statutes and international treaty. - Internationally The International
Telecommunication Union (ITU), which is a
specialized agency of the United Nations, acts as
the global spectrum coordinator and develops
binding international treaty governing the use of
the radio spectrum by some 40 different services
around the world. - The Radio Regulations contain a number of
provisions governing the way the radio frequency
spectrum is to be used. - Nationally (within the US) responsibility is
broken into 2 areas - National Telecommunications and Information
Agency (NTIA) manages the Government spectrum - Federal Communications Commission (FCC) manages
the non-government spectrum - The international and national Table of
Allocations shows what segments of the radio
frequency spectrum are to be used by which
services.
78Spectrum Allocations Available to NASA LEO
Missions for Telecommunications
79Background Material
80References
- Digital Communications, Bernard Sklar
- Antennas, J.D. Ravs
- Space Network Users Guide, Rev. 8, June 2002,
http//gdms.gsfc.nasa.gov/ - Sign on as Guest
- Select CCMS
- Select Document Library
- Select Code 450
- Error Bounds for Convolutional Codes and
Asymmetrically Optimum Decoding Algorithum, A.J.
Viterbi, IEEE Trans information Theory, Vol.
IT13, April 1967, pp 260-169 - Principles of Digital Communications and
Coding, A.J. Viterbi and J.K. Omura - Ground Network Users Guide, February 2001,
http//www.wff.nasa.gov/code452/ - Digital Communications, Kamilo Feher
- Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems
(CCSDS)http//www.CCSDS.ORG
81Compression Lossy versus Lossless Compression
- A lossless compression technique means that the
restored data file is identical to the original. - This is necessary for many types of data, like
executable code, word processing files, etc. - GIF images are examples of lossless compressed
files. - On the other hand, data files that represent
images, among others, do not have to be kept in
perfect condition. - A lossy compression technique allows a small
level of noisy degradation to the original data. - Lossy techniques are much more effective at
compression than lossless methods for a digital
image, JPEG can achieve a 12-to-1 compression
ratio, as opposed to a 2-to-1 ratio for GIF.
82Link Equation Pr/N0 for Cascaded Links
- Often a satellite communications link will
consist of more than one point-to-point path. - For example, a satellite at low earth orbit often
will send its data up to a satellite at high
earth orbit, which will then relay the data down
to a ground station. - For a two-path system, the total Pr/N0 can be
found as - As an example, if a link has uplink Pr/N0 of 60
dB-Hz and a downlink Pr/N0 of 60 dB-Hz, then the
overall Pr/N0 is 57 dB-Hz. - Sometimes either the uplink or the downlink will
be much more high powered than the other. - In this case, the total Pr/N0 will be almost
identical to that of the weaker link, and the
link budget for the stronger link need not even
be done at all.
83Link Equation Geometric Coverage (TDRS)
TDRSS Satellite System Areas of non coverage
84Space Segment Tracking and Data Relay Satellites
85Spectrum Available Allocations for the Ground
Network and/or the Space Network
S-band
- Only bands that support both the Ground Network
(GN) and the Space Network (SN) on a primary
basis. - Basic capabilities of the Ground Network at
S-band are - Command rates to 32 kbps (note)
- Telemetry and mission data rates to 10 Mbps
(note) - Support available from selected sites worldwide
- Basic capabilities of the Space Network at S-band
are - Command rates to 300 kbps PN spread
- Telemetry and mission data rates to 6 Mbps
- Virtually global support.
- Efforts to control the inter-service interference
are under-way within the ITU-R.
Note Maximum support data rate is dependent on
the particular ground station capabilities
86Spectrum Available Allocations for the Ground
Network and/or the Space Network
X-band
- Bands only support Ground Network operations on a
primary basis - The 7190-7235 MHz band may be used to command
subject to the earth station being coordinated
with terrestrial systems operating in the bands
that might experience interference. - The 8025-8400 MHz and 8450-8500 MHz bands may be
used for transmissions in the space-Earth
direction. - Basic capabilities of the Ground Network at
X-band are - Telemetry and mission data rates to 150 Mbps
(note)
S5.460 Additional allocation the band
7 145 - 7 235 MHz is also allocated to the space
research (Earth-to-space) service on a primary
basis, subject to agreement obtained under No.
S9.21. The use of the band 7 145 -7 190 MHz is
restricted to deep space no emissions to deep
space shall be effected in the band 7 190 - 7 235
MHz.
Note Maximum support data rate is dependent on
the particular ground station capabilities
87Spectrum Available Allocations for the Ground
Network and/or the Space Network
Ku-band
- Bands only support Space Network Operations
(13.775 GHz forward/15.0034 GHz return) on a
secondary basis - For TDRSS advanced publications received prior to
January 31 1992, the 13.775 GHz forward link
operates on a primary basis with respect to the
Fixed-Satellite Service (E-S). - Basic capabilities of the Space Network at
Ku-band are - Forward link will support up to 25 Mbps.
- Return link will support up to 300 Mbps.
- Virtually global support.
88Spectrum Available Allocations for the Ground
Network and/or the Space Network
Ka-band
- The pair of Ka-band allocations (22.55-23.55 GHz
and 25.25-27.5 GHz) support only the Space
Network on a primary basis. - The 25.5-27 GHz band is available globally on a
primary basis for S-E transmissions from
Earth-exploration satellites. - Basic capabilities of the Space Network at
Ka-band are - Forward links in the 22.55-23.55 GHz band will
support data rates up to 25 Mbps. - Return links in the 25.25-27.5 GHz band will
support data rates up to 300/800 Mbps (note)
Note Capable of supporting 800 Mbps with
upgrades to the TDRSS ground stations
89Spectrum Definition of Spectrum Allocations
- Space Research Service A radiocommunication
service in which spacecraft or other objects in
space are used for scientific or technological
research purposes. - Space Operation Service A radiocommunication
service concerned exclusively with the operation
of spacecraft, in particular space tracking,
space telemetry and space telecommand. - Earth Exploration-Satellite Service A
radiocommunication service between earth stations
and one or more space stations, which may include
links between space stations, in which - information relating to the characteristics of
the Earth and its natural phenomena, including
data relating to the state of the environment, is
obtained from active sensors or passive sensors
on Earth satellites - similar information is collected from airborne or
Earth-based platforms - such information may be distributed to earth
stations within the system concerned - platform interrogation may be included.
- This service may also include feeder links
necessary for its operation. - Meteorological-Satellite Service An earth
exploration-satellite service for meteorological
purposes. - Inter-Satellite Service A radiocommunication
service providing links between artificial
satellites.