DocumentCode
2238108
Title
Radar-derived path reduction factors for terrestrial systems
Author
Goddard, J.W.F. ; Thurai, M.
Author_Institution
Rutherford Appleton Lab., Chilton, UK
Volume
2
fYear
1997
fDate
14-17 Apr 1997
Firstpage
218
Abstract
Attenuation due to rain becomes an increasingly important factor as frequency increases above 5 GHz. For terrestrial links operating at high microwave and millimetre wave frequencies, it is considered to be the dominant mechanism affecting system availability. At frequencies above 30 GHz, cloud and fog will also become a significant factor, while in high latitude regions, or high altitude locations in lower latitude regions, attenuation due to melting snowflakes can be considerable. However, the only effect for which ITU-R provide a full statistical prediction model is that of rain. This is contained in Recommendation 530-5, section 2.4. A particular aspect of the model considered is the method used to allow for the inhomogeneity of rainfall. This is achieved through a quantity called the `effective path length´, which is shorter than the actual path length of interest. It is over this `effective path length´ that attenuation, based on point rainfall statistics, is assumed to be uniform. Experimental verification of this procedure is difficult, because it requires several links with different path lengths to be located in close proximity. An alternative approach is through the use of radar data to obtain attenuation statistics for simulated links of various lengths. This approach is adopted
Keywords
millimetre wave propagation; ITU-R; Recommendation 530-5; attenuation statistics; cloud; effective path length; fog; high altitude locations; high latitude regions; lower latitude regions; melting snowflakes; microwave frequencies; millimetre wave frequencies; point rainfall statistics; radar data; radar derived path reduction factors; rain attenuation; rain scatter interference models; rainfall inhomogeneity; simulated links; statistical prediction model; system availability; terrestrial links; terrestrial systems;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Antennas and Propagation, Tenth International Conference on (Conf. Publ. No. 436)
Conference_Location
Edinburgh
ISSN
0537-9989
Print_ISBN
0-85296-686-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/cp:19970367
Filename
606971
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