DocumentCode :
2033049
Title :
Effects of solar, Galactic and man-made noise on UHF SATCOM operation
Author :
Franke, Ernie
Author_Institution :
ECI Div., Raytheon E-Syst, St. Petersburg, FL, USA
Volume :
1
fYear :
1996
fDate :
21-24 Oct 1996
Firstpage :
29
Abstract :
Noise power radiated by the Sun and stars, Earth and man-made noise, antenna characteristics and receiver performance all affect UHF Satellite Communications (SATCOM) operation. Stationary terminals deploy high-gain, directional antennae for SATCOM operation, while mobile terminals utilize low-gain, hemispherical-coverage antennae. As a result, the mobile terminal is plagued by low link margin, due to a limited antenna coverage profile, multipath fading, and shadowing. Aircraft communications are discussed in particular. Concern about solar noise impacting UHF SATCOM operation arises from two sources, solar transit and link margin. The noise level of a UHF receiver is ultimately limited by the receive antenna temperature. A large amount of published data is available to assist the engineer in evaluating the level of antenna noise. Just because the Sun appears as a black-body radiator of 800,000 K at UHF, it cannot be blindly inserted into a link margin algorithm just as much as a quiet sky temperature of 90 K is not always appropriate. Antenna noise temperature is linked to the type of antenna used which is further linked to the mobility of the platform. Actual antenna temperature is determined by that portion of the antenna pattern that views the warm Earth or man-made noise of a city. Spatial diversity is employed on mobile platforms to combat shadowing and multipath fading, while effectively achieving hemispherical coverage
Keywords :
aircraft communication; diversity reception; interference suppression; military aircraft; military communication; mobile antennas; mobile satellite communication; noise; radio receivers; radiofrequency interference; satellite antennas; Galactic and man-made noise; Sun; UHF SATCOM operation; UHF receiver; antenna coverage profile; antenna noise; antenna temperature; high-gain directional antenna; link margin; low-gain hemispherical-coverage antennae; man-made noise; mobile terminal; mobile terminals; multipath fading; receive antenna; receiver performance; shadowing; solar noise; solar transit; spatial diversity; stars; stationary terminals; Directive antennas; Earth; Fading; Mobile antennas; Noise level; Receiving antennas; Satellite antennas; Shadow mapping; Sun; Temperature;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Military Communications Conference, 1996. MILCOM '96, Conference Proceedings, IEEE
Conference_Location :
McLean, VA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3682-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MILCOM.1996.568578
Filename :
568578
Link To Document :
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