Title: RCM -2- 1
1Un-Fadded, Or Best Case Signal
2Calculation of link loss budget
- There are now several components that we need to
calculate to obtain a link design. These fall
into two main categories. - The strength of the signal received.
- We have looked at path loss due to the
propagation of the signal in detail in terms of
mechanisms, we will now consider several methods
to calculate the statistical behaviour of this
process. - We have a component based model from which we can
calculate the power delivered to the receiver,
compeered to the power delivered by the
transmitter. - The noise level
- Thermal Noise
- Atmospheric Noise
- Man made Noise
- Cosmic Noise
3Un-faded Signal At The Receiver
- We are now going to ignore all the fast and
variable fade processes we have discussed, so
that we can obtain a value of delivered power at
the receiver in ideal conditions. - First thing we need to do is calculate the signal
power at the point where the receiving terminal
is positioned. - We do this by first considering the Equivalent
Isotropic Radiation Power of the transmitter. - To find the power at the receiver we consider
only Free Space Loss, FSL, and atmospheric
absorption, Al. This is power delivered at the
receiver and we call it the Isotropic Receiver
Power (IRP). - This gives us the maximum power that can be
delivered to the receiver, from this we need to
understand how much of the power at any time is - Delivered to the receiver.
- Usable by the receiver to extract information
from.
4Effects of Noise and C/N
5The Useful Received Signal
- From the point of view of knowing how much energy
is delivered to the receiver we must consider how
it is effected by noise. - The receiving system is itself generating a noise
signal, to this the environment may be adding
noise from other sources. The noise will simple
add to the received signal, so it is now a matter
of ensuring the delivered power of the wanted
signal is large enough so that it we can
distinguish it from the noise. - Hence we are interested in the ratio of the
signal strengths, or simply the signal to noise
ratio, C/N. - We know the power at the receiver, so we can
define the C/N as - Where PN is simply the total noise power
6Thermal Noise (I)
- Thermal noise is caused by the thermal motion of
particles, hence it emanates from all materials. - Thermal noise is modelled as a white Gaussian
stochastic process with power spectral density N0
- Where k is Baltzmanns constant (k 1.38x1023).
- T is the absolute temperature in Kelvins.
- For a bandwidth Limited signal of bandwidth B,
then the noise power is. - In dBs and at room temperature (T290k) this
becomes, in Watts - In milliwatts
7Thermal Noise (II)
- The thermal noise level is frequently referred to
as the thermal threshold. For a receiver
operating at room temperature it is a function of
the bandwidth of the receiver (in practical terms
this is the IF bandwidth (BIF) measured in Hz and
the noise figure in dBs of the receiver. - Thus the thermal noise threshold Pt of the
receiver can be calculated as follows
8Noise Figure
- Consider an amplifier with a Gain Gp and a
bandwidth B. - At the amplifier input we have the signal plus
the signal noise. - At the output we have
- Where Te is the noise temperature of the
amplifier referred to its inputs - The noise figure for the amplifier is
- The portion of the noise figure arising from the
internally generated noise is
9Example Link Budget Calculation
- A receiver for a LOS link operating at 2 GHz and
a bandwidth of 1MHz consists of an Antenna
preamplifier with a noise temperature of 127K and
a gain of 20 dB. This is followed by an amplifier
with a noise figure of 12dB and a gain of 80dB. - Compute the overall noise figure and equivalent
noise temperature of the receiver! - The receiving antenna gain is 40dB and the
antenna noise temperature is 59K. If the
transmitter antenna gain is 6dB and the expected
path losses are 190dB, what is the minimum
required satellite transmitter power to achieve a
14 dB SNR at the output of the receiver?
10CALCULATING FM MODULATION BANDWIDTH
- Frequency Modulation creates modulation sidebands
that theoretically extend to infinite bandwidth.
These sidebands consist of Bessel Functions of
any order. From a practical standpoint the band
occupancy of an FM modulated carrier only needs
to count the Bessel Function sidebands of
significant amplitude. The formula that
calculates this bandwidth is called CARSON'S
RULE. - This rule requires knowing the modulating
frequency Fm and the maximum frequency deviation
?Fp of the transmitted carrier. - Example, a monaural RF band modulator will have a
peak deviation of 75KHz and the highest audio
frequency is 15KHz. To calculate the CARSON'S
RULE bandwidth occupancy of this signal, add the
highest audio frequency to the peak deviation
(15KHz 75KHz 90KHz), then multiply by two to
include both the upper and lower sideband (90KHz
X 2 180KHz). Since there are many Bessel
Function sidebands beyond 180KHz, FM channels
must be spaced considerably farther apart than
180KHz. The FCC has determined that a spacing of
400KHz provides sufficient "Guard Band" to
effectively prevent inter-channel cross-talk, but
that 180KHz is sufficient bandwidth to receive
the original modulation with less than 1
distortion. The distortion is due to a failure to
receive all of the modulation energy. - Amplitude Modulation bandwidth can be considered
exactly two times the highest frequency of
modulation, while Frequency Modulation bandwidth
is described by Bessel Functions that extend much
higher than those of Amplitude Modulation. In
fact the "FM Advantage" in signal-to-noise ratio
stems exactly from spreading the modulation over
a greater bandwidth than Amplitude Modulation.
11Antenna Gain Calculation
12Antennas
- Types parabolic reflectors, Cassegrain antenna,
horns, passive reflective reflectors and antenna
arrays. - Parameters to analyse
- gain a function of the geometric surface and
frequency. - Beam Width
- Precision in the orientation is required.
- Radiation Diagrams
13Antenna Gain (I)
- We are going to concentrate on Parabolic
reflectors. - These systems have side lobes that means signals
can couple into the antenna in directions other
than the line of sight. This will have
significance when we are considering frequency
planning. - The gain of the antennas is one of the most
flexible parameters we have in modifying the link
budget, so we need a mechanism to calculate it.
14Antenna Gain (II)
- The antenna Gain is given by
- Where ? is the antenna efficiency and Da is the
antenna diameter. - Should have a size much greater than Da and
surface roughness much less than Da. - If we measure Da in meters and move into dBs, we
get - The efficiency for such antennas is in range,
55-65, we assume 55.
15Passive Repeaters
- They are used to change the direction of the
radio path. - They can be either parabolic or flat reflectors.
- Examples
- Reflectors in far field
- Passive repeater with two parabolic antennas.
- Passive repeated with reflecting plane (The angle
must not be too obtuse). - Passive repeater with two reflecting planes in
one point or two. - Reflectors in near field. Places the antenna at a
specified height. - Calculation of attenuation in a path with passive
reflectors - Parabolic reflector (1)
- Flat reflector (2)
- The width of the beam decreases as the surface
increases and it must not be lower than 1º. - Periscope configuration (5.16)
16Fade Margin Calculation
17Other Random Processes
- In addition to the noise in the system that is
seen as a random process, many other aspects of
the system are subject to random processes. - Many things are effecting the signals as they
propagate. - We cannot possibly know all the details of the
environment through which the signal propagates,
hence we have to model it by some degree of
uncertainty. - This randomness will have to be accounted for in
both time and space.
18Calculating Fade Margins
- As stated, so far we have calculated only
Free-space and atmospheric attenuation losses,
but we have examined in detail the mechanisms
that would lead to Fading. - We have until now only spoken superficially about
the effects of the fading in real terms, but have
made it clear the amount of fade is a dynamic
process. - This means that the changes in environment of
weather conditions will cause changes in the fade
level through time. - We have a calculated value for the signal
strength presented to the receiver, RSL, but this
is in fact a maximum value.
The RSL value for a path subject to Freespace
and atmospheric attenuation only.
The real RSL value which varies in time due to
fading processes.
RSL
t
19Statistical Nature Of Field Strength
- The complexity of the fading process and the
number of parameters involved mean that we need
to take a statistical view of the behaviour of
the received field strength. - The nature of the statistics is controlled by
many factors. As stated before the terrain,
climate and path length play a very significant
role. - Path lengths below 5 Kilometres can generally be
regarded as fade free. - We know that we have to obtained a specific level
of C/N to actually receive the signal. This means
in summary that to ensure the signal is received
we need it to exceed a specific value which
overcomes the thermal noise threshold. - If the signal falls below this point the link can
be considered to be non functioning. - As the signal strength varies with time we can
only ensure that the threshold is exceeded a
certain percentage of the time.
20Outage Time
- We have calculated the RSL and the noise
threshold, so over time we can see when the link
is functioning and when it is not, - The parts in red are when the field strength
falls below an acceptable value. - This gives us an amount of time during which the
link fails, the outage time.
RSL
Free-space and atmospheric losses
Fade Margin
Noise power threshold
t
21Improving Outage Time
- We can design a particular RSLFS by increasing
the transmission power, and/or the antenna gain
etc.. Hence we can change the outage time by
changing the RSL. - In this case we have a much lower outage time,
hence better performance. - Of the many methods to support design, they are
all effectively estimating the probable outage
time for a limited set of input parameters.
Free-space and atmospheric losses.
RSL
Fade Margin
Noise power threshold
t
22Using the Rayleigh Fading Assumptions
- Once you know what to calculate the trick is then
to come up with a systematic method to do so. - There are many models that are available and many
organisations have come up with their own
methodologies. - The methods are based on finding the probability
a field of a given strength will fall below a
certain value for a known duration of time. - If we assume that the fading is due entirely to
multi-path conditions we can use the Rayleigh
Distribution to calculate the worst fade
conditions. - The Rayleigh distribution in a microwave link is
really a worst-case upper-bound value. Empirical
measurements are also shown which indicate that
other distributions are more appropriate,
particularly over the shorter paths over land. - As stated previously a complementary function can
be defined that calculates the probability of
exceeding a given value.
23Rayleigh Fade Margin (I)
- The graph shows the depth of fade in decibels
versus the fractional time the fade is in excess
of the abscissa. - In summary this means if you take a point along
the abscissa, say 25dB, then the graph tells you
that the link would be down 0.003 fractional part
of the time -
- Additionally the graph shows three separate
curves a) The Rayleigh curve b) the Durkee
curve and c) the curve used by the French P.T.T.
- This data is usually appropriate for a given type
of terrain and climate and must be substituted
when the conditions change.
24Rayleigh Fade Margin (II)
- For quick calculations the following table can be
used to calculate the fade margins required to
support a link availability of a particular
value. - Any level of availability can be calculated by
extrapolation. For example a link requiring
99.95 time availability would require a 33dB
Fade Margin. - For example if the minimum un-faded C/N for the
above link was 20dB, the link would require 20
33 53 dB power level to meet the 99.95
objective.
Time Availability () Fade Margin (dB)
90.0 99.0 99.9 99.99 99.999 8 18 28 38 48
25Path Classification Method (I)
- This method is based on CCIR recommendations and
empirical results supplied by Siemens. - Siemens has classified into three categories
depending upon characteristics of the path. - The method only applies to overland links that
have unobstructed LOS conditions.
26Path Classification Method (II)
- Type A These paths have favourable fading
characteristics, troposphereic effects are rare.
They are over hilly country, but not over wide
river valleys and inland water and in high
mountainous country with paths hig above the
valleys. They can also be characterised as being
between a plain or a valley and mountains, where
the angle of elevation exceeds 0.5o. - Type B These are paths with average fading
characteristics and are typically over flat, or
undulating country where troposphereic effects
may occur. They are also over hilly country, but
not over river valleys or open water. They are
also characterised as being over coastal regions
in moderate climates, but not over over the sea. - Type C These paths have adverse fading
conditions. They are characterised as being over
humid areas with ground fog being common. Paths
that are low over flat country, such as wide
river valleys and moors. They are typical of
costal links in hot climates and paths in
tropically regions with no angle of elevation.
27Path Classification Method (III)
- They can be estimated with the following
formulas. - Where PW is the probability that the fade depth A
is exceeded in one year. - F radio carrier frequency in gigahertz.
- d path length in kilometres.
- A fading depth in decibels.
28ITU-R 530 Method
- This is a more sophisticated method and takes
into account the type of terrain over which the
link must travel. - It introduces the concept of a geoclimatic factor
K. Of which there are 4 - Two types of K are used for over land links.
- Two types of K are used for over water links.
29Fading On Multi-Hop Paths
- Experimental evidence indicates that, in
clear-air conditions, fading events exceeding 20
dB on adjacent hops in a multi-hop link are
almost completely uncorrelated. This suggests
that, for analogue systems with large fade
margins, the outage time for a series of hops in
tandem is approximately given by the sum of the
outage times for the individual hops. - For fade depths not exceeding 10 dB, the
probability of simultaneously exceeding a given
fade depth on two adjacent hops can be estimated
from - where P1 and P2 are the probabilities of
exceeding this fade depth on each individual hop
(see Note). - The correlation between fading on adjacent hops
decreases with increasing fade depth between
10 and 20 dB, so that the probability of
simultaneously exceeding a fade depth greater
than 20 dB can be approximately expressed by - NOTE The correlation between fading on adjacent
hops is expected to be dependent on path length.
The first Equation is an average based on the
results of measurements on 47 pairs of adjacent
line-of-sight hops operating in the 5 GHz band,
with path lengths in the range of 11 to 97 km,
and an average path length of approximately 45
km.
30Attenuation Due To Hydrometeors
- Attenuation can also occur as a result of
absorption and scattering by such hydrometeors as
rain, snow, hail and fog. Although rain
attenuation can be ignored at frequencies below
about 5 GHz, it must be included in design
calculations at higher frequencies, where its
importance increases rapidly. On paths at high
latitudes or high altitude paths at lower
latitudes, wet snow can cause significant
attenuation over an even larger range of
frequencies. More detailed information on
attenuation due to hydrometeors other than rain
is given in Recommendation ITU-R P.840. - At frequencies where both rain attenuation and
multipath fading must be taken into account, the
exceedance percentages for a given fade depth
corresponding to each of these mechanisms can be
added.
31Techniques For Alleviating The Effects Of
Multipath Propagation (I)
- The effects of slow relatively non-frequency
selective fading (i.e. flat fading) due to beam
spreading, and faster frequency-selective fading
due to multipath propagation can be reduced by
both non-diversity and diversity techniques.
32Techniques For Alleviating The Effects Of
Multipath Propagation (II)
- Techniques without diversity The guidance is
divided into three groups reduction of the
levels of ground reflection, increase of path
inclination, and reduction of path clearance. - Reduction of ground reflection levels Links
should be sited where possible to reduce the
level of surface reflections. Techniques include
the siting of overwater links to place surface
reflections on land rather than water and the
siting of overland and overwater links to
similarly avoid large flat highly reflecting
surfaces on land. Another technique known to
reduce the level of surface reflections is to
tilt the antennas slightly upwards. Detailed
information on appropriate tilt angles is not yet
available. A trade-off must be made between the
resultant loss in antenna directivity in normal
refractive conditions that this technique
entails, and the improvement in multipath fading
conditions. - Increase of path inclination Links should be
sited to take advantage of terrain in ways that
will increase the path inclination, since
increasing path inclination is known to reduce
the effects of beam spreading, surface multipath
fading, and atmospheric multipath fading. The
positions of the antennas on the radio link
towers should be chosen to give the largest
possible inclinations, particular for the longest
links. - Reduction of path clearance Another technique
that is less well understood involves the
reduction of path clearance. A trade-off must be
made between the reduction of the effects of
multipath fading and distortion and the increased
fading due to sub-refraction. However, for the
space diversity configuration one antenna might
be positioned with low clearance.
33Space Diversity
34Frequency Diversity
35Techniques For Alleviating The Effects Of
Multipath Propagation (III)
- Diversity techniques Diversity techniques include
space, angle and frequency diversity. Frequency
diversity should be avoided whenever possible so
as to conserve spectrum. Whenever space diversity
is used, angle diversity should also be employed
by tilting the antennas at different upward
angles. Angle diversity can be used in situations
in which adequate space diversity is not possible
or to reduce tower heights. - The degree of improvement afforded by all of
these techniques depends on the extent to which
the signals in the diversity branches of the
system are uncorrelated. For narrow-band analogue
systems, it is sufficient to determine the
improvement in the statistics of fade depth at a
single frequency. For wideband digital systems,
the diversity improvement also depends on the
statistics of in-band distortion. - The diversity improvement factor, I, for fade
depth, A, is defined by - I p( A ) / pd ( A )
- where pd (A) is the percentage of time in the
combined diversity signal branch with fade depth
larger than A and p(A) is the percentage for the
unprotected path. The diversity improvement
factor for digital systems is defined by the
ratio of the exceedance times for a given BER
with and without diversity.