DocumentCode
1026506
Title
Atmospheric EHF window transparencies near 35, 90, 140 and 220 GHz
Author
Liebe, Hans J.
Author_Institution
Nat´´l. Telecommunications and Information Administration, Inst. for Telecommunication Sci., Boulder, CO USA
Volume
31
Issue
1
fYear
1983
fDate
1/1/1983 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
127
Lastpage
135
Abstract
Transparency of the four atmospheric extremely high frequency (EHF) window ranges located around 35, 90, 140, and 220 GHz is obscured by precipitation (rain, wet snow), by suspended particles (fog, cloud, haze, dust), and by water vapor. An assessment is made of the quantitative picture (i.e., models versus experiments and theory.), upon which estimations for general radio path behavior can be based. Useful models are provided for calculating attenuation based upon measurable meteorological variables: rain rate, liquid water content, humidity, temperature, and pressure. Information currently available is not yet complete enough to provide accurate predictions under all climatological conditions. Emphasis is on recent advances in formulating the physical basis for modeling transparency and on a discussion of some of the principal remaining uncertainties.
Keywords
Millimeter-wave radio propagation meteorological factors; Atmospheric modeling; Attenuation measurement; Clouds; Estimation theory; Frequency; Humidity measurement; Meteorology; Pressure measurement; Rain; Snow;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-926X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAP.1983.1143013
Filename
1143013
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