• DocumentCode
    2281663
  • Title

    Carrier frequency allocation in FDMA military SATCOMs

  • Author

    Westbrook, L.D. ; Calladene, T. ; Berry, I. ; Briscombe, N.

  • Author_Institution
    Satellite Commun. Centre, QinetiQ, Defford, UK
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    2001
  • fDate
    2001
  • Firstpage
    30
  • Abstract
    Tactical military SATCOMs require a sophisticated balance between efficiency and resilience. Ideally, this balance needs to be flexible and dynamic, so as to adapt as demands (and threats) ebb and flow. Automation is seen as the key to providing the flexibility to migrate SATCOM band plans between rapidly evolving scenarios. Efficiency and revenue maximisation are often the key drivers in commercial satellite systems, nevertheless carrier frequency allocation techniques developed for civilian systems can be usefully employed in military systems, provided optimisation is extended to address resilience and support flexibility. Key factors in optimising frequency plans in multi-satellite, multi-beam, multi-terminal, multi-modulation systems are frequency re-use, compliance with satellite and ground station regulation and co-ordination agreements and, critically, the control (or mitigation) of intermodulation products. Significant differences between military and civilian systems are the likelihood of electronic attack and the widespread use of spread-spectrum (particularly frequency hopped) systems, which typically trade spectral efficiency for increased robustness and reduced probability of detection. We describe carrier frequency assignment approaches for SATCOM systems. Techniques studied include the use of meta-heuristic algorithms, such as genetic algorithms and tabu search, and quasi intermodulation-free schemes based on Golomb rulers, as well as conventional heuristic approaches such as variants of the insertion/deletion method.
  • Keywords
    frequency allocation; frequency division multiple access; frequency hop communication; genetic algorithms; intermodulation; military communication; probability; satellite communication; search problems; spread spectrum communication; FDMA; Golomb rulers; carrier frequency allocation; detection probability; frequency hopped systems; genetic algorithms; insertion/deletion method; intermodulation products; meta-heuristic algorithms; military SATCOM; resilience; robustness; spectral efficiency; spread spectrum systems; support flexibility; tabu search; Automation; Control systems; Frequency division multiaccess; Genetic algorithms; Military satellites; Radio spectrum management; Resilience; Robustness; Satellite ground stations; Spread spectrum communication;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Military Communications Conference, 2001. MILCOM 2001. Communications for Network-Centric Operations: Creating the Information Force. IEEE
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-7225-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MILCOM.2001.985759
  • Filename
    985759