Title :
A study of satellite channel utilization in the presence of rain attenuation in Florida
Author :
Karimi, Kaivan ; Aalo, Valentine ; Helmken, Henry
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton, FL, USA
Abstract :
Rain attenuation is the most dominant cause of signal degradation in satellite links operating at Ka-band. This is a particularly serious issue for ground terminal stations located in a sub-tropical region such as state of Florida. Presently, most rain compensation algorithms are based on the use of a fixed, large fade margin to combat occasional deep fades. However, the use of a fixed margin, especially for a rainy region, results in an inefficient use of channel capacity for a high percentage of the time. This paper uses an adaptive rain fade counter-measure based on the effective utilization of the channel capacity for several Florida locations with links operating in the Ka-band. In order to determine the outage rates both in terms of channel capacity and BER, Manning´s (1990) rain attenuation prediction model, based on the rain history of the transmitting and receiving stations has been employed
Keywords :
channel capacity; electromagnetic wave absorption; electromagnetic wave scattering; fading; radiowave propagation; rain; satellite ground stations; satellite relay systems; tropospheric electromagnetic wave propagation; BER; Florida; Ka-band; adaptive rain fade countermeasure; channel capacity; deep fades; fade margin; ground terminal stations; outage rates; rain attenuation; rain attenuation prediction model; rain compensation algorithms; rain history; receiving stations; satellite channel utilization; satellite links; signal degradation; sub-tropical region; transmitting stations; Attenuation; Bandwidth; Bit error rate; Channel capacity; Degradation; Frequency; Predictive models; Rain fading; Satellites; Statistics;
Conference_Titel :
Southeastcon '94. Creative Technology Transfer - A Global Affair., Proceedings of the 1994 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Miami, FL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-1797-1
DOI :
10.1109/SECON.1994.324296