ECE 5233 Satellite Communications
Prepared by:
Dr. Ivica Kostanic
Lecture 8: Satellite link design
(Section 4.1, 4.2)
Spring 2014
Outline
Objectives of link design
Elements of satellite link
Free space path loss equation
Signal to noise ratio and link capacity
Examples
Important note: Slides present summary of the results. Detailed derivations
are given in notes.
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Objective of a link analysis
Link analysis determines properties of
satellite equipment (antennas, amplifiers,
data rate, etc.)
Two links need to be planned
o Uplink – from ground to satellite
o Downlink – from satellite to ground
Two way communication – 4 links (two
way maritime communications)
One way communication – 2 links One way
(example – TV broadcast) communication
Two links are not at the same frequency
Two links may or may not be in the same
band
o Fixed / broadcast satellite services
– usually same band
o Mobile satellite services may use
different bands
In some systems satellite links may be
combined with terrestrial returns
Two way
communication Page 3
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Elements of a satellite link
Transmit power
TX antenna gain
Path losses
o Free space
o TX/RX antenna losses
o Environmental losses
RX antenna gain
RX properties
o Noise temperature
o Sensitivity (S/N and ROC)
Design margins required to guarantee
certain reliability
Note: satellite signals are usually very weak
– requires careful link budget planning
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Free space path loss – transmit side
Free Space Path Losses (FSPL) due to Power flux in the direction of
dispersion of EM wave energy maximum radiation
Antenna used to focus the energy of the wave in
the direction of the receiver PT GT
W
Note: antenna gain is usually quoted in the 4R 2
direction of radiation maximum. For other
direction need to use the actual radiation pattern
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Free space path loss – receive side
Received power
PT GT
PR W Ae Ae
4R 2
Using
2
Ae GR
4
One obtains
Effective antenna gain (effective aperture) PT GT GR
PR
Ae A A 4R / 2
FSPL equation
hA – aperture efficiency of the antenna (50-90%)
FSPL 4R /
2
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Free Space Path Loss (FSPL)
Equation for FSPL (linear)
FSPL 4R /
2
R = distance between TX and RX
l = wavelength of the RF wave
Equation for FSPL (logarithmic) – Friis’ equations
FSPL 96.5 20 log d miles 20 log f GHz
FSPL 92.44 20 log d km 20 log f GHz
Notes:
FSPL grow 20dB/dec as a function of distance
FSPL curves 1-32GHz
FSPL grows 20dB/dec as a function of frequency range
FSPL curves are straight lines in log-log coordinate system
For Geo-Stationary satellites – loss may be above 200dB!
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Additional losses
Additional losses
o Misalignment of the antennas
o Atmospheric losses
o Radome losses
o Component mismatch losses
The additional losses are taken into
account through appropriate design
margins
Typical design margin 5-10dB
o Component accuracy
o Operating frequency
o Required reliability
Link equation
PR EiRP GR FSPL AL
AL – additional losses
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Shannon capacity formula
Shannon capacity formula – establishes Minimum energy per bit normalized to
fundamental limits on communication noise power density that is required for a
given spectrum utilization
In the case of AWGN satellite channel
S
C B log 2 1 Eb Eb 2 1
N min
N0 N0
C – capacity of the channel in bits/sec
B – bandwidth of the channel in Hz
S/N – signal to noise ratio (linear) Note: g is the fundamental
measure of spectrum utilization.
Ultimate goal of every wireless
Define g = R/B - bandwidth utilization in bps/Hz,
communication system is to
where R is the information rate in bps.
provide largest g for a given set
of constraints.
C Eb R
log 2 1
B N0 B
Eb
log 2 1
N0 Page 9
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Bandwidth utilization vs. power trade-off
7
Bandwidth utilization increases with an
increase of available power
6
In power limited regions small increase
Bandwidth limited
of power produce significant increase in
5 bandwidth utilization
Spectral efficiency [bps/Hz]
In bandwidth limited region large power
4
increase is required for increase in
Eb Eb 2 1 bandwidth utilization
3 min
N0 For systems that are in bandwidth
N0
limited region – capacity is increased
2
through frequency reuse
Power limited
By combining power and reuse
1
methods, contemporary systems reach
spectrum utilization of 3-7bps/Hz
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
EbNo ~ Power (linear ratio)
Note: most of contemporary satellite systems are bandwidth limited – lot of
efforts invested in means for spectrum reuse
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Examples
Example 4.2.1. A satellite at a distance of Example 4.2.2. The satellite in Example 4.2.1
40000km from a point on Earth surface operates at a frequency of 11GHz (Ku band).
radiates power of 10W into antenna gain of The gain of the receiving antenna is 52.3dB.
17dB. Find the flux density on the Earth Find the received power.
surface and the power received using
Answer:
antenna with effective aperture of 10
square meters. Received power: -126dBW
Answers:
Flux density: 2.49e-14 W/m2
Received power: -126dBW (-96dBm)
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