Title :
Average bit error rate for satellite downlink communications in Ka-band under atmospheric turbulence given by Gaussian model
Author :
Hanada, Tatsuyuki ; Fujisaki, Kiyotaka ; Tateiba, Mitsuo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Commun. Eng., Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan
Abstract :
We study the influence of atmospheric turbulence on satellite communications by the theoretical analysis of propagation characteristics of electromagnetic waves through inhomogeneous random media. We analyze the average bit error rate (BER) for the geostationary earth orbit satellite downlink communications in Ka-band under atmospheric turbulence whose statistical characteristics are given by the Gaussian model. The average BER is deduced by the probability density function of the received intensity, which function is obtained by the moments of the received intensity. From the analysis, we find that the variance of received intensity caused by wave form distortion results in the degradation in BER performance at low elevation angles.
Keywords :
Gaussian processes; artificial satellites; atmospheric turbulence; electromagnetic wave propagation; error statistics; satellite communication; statistical analysis; BER; Gaussian model; Ka-band; atmospheric turbulence; average bit error rate; electromagnetic waved propagation; geostationary earth orbit satellite downlink communications; inhomogeneous random media; low elevation angles; probability density function; statistical characteristics; Artificial satellites; Atmospheric modeling; Atmospheric waves; Bit error rate; Downlink; Electromagnetic analysis; Electromagnetic propagation; Electromagnetic scattering; Random media; Satellite communication; Communication system performance; earth atmosphere; electromagnetic propagation in random media; satellite communication; turbulent media;
Conference_Titel :
Microwave Conference, 2009. APMC 2009. Asia Pacific
Conference_Location :
Singapore
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2801-4
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2802-1
DOI :
10.1109/APMC.2009.5384382