Title :
Diversity Antenna System for Satellite Digital Audio Radio
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Electron. Eng., Yeditepe Univ., Istanbul, Turkey
Abstract :
A diversity antenna system with antennas embedded in rear view mirrors of a vehicle is proposed for satellite digital audio radio system. Antenna diversity is needed because hidden antennas exhibit limited capability and composite body vehicles have poor reception due to no ground plane availability. Pattern gain diversity achieved with the proposed system is proven with on-vehicle antenna simulations and gain measurements. Selection combining diversity receiver architecture is also proposed and the system is tested in real time under two fading scenarios: weak satellite signal in dense foliage and multipath terrestrial environment with frequent satellite blockages. In both cases, the diversity system outperformed the reference antenna system with less mutes times (0.6% versus 0.8% in multipath, 0.1% versus 0.25% in dense foliage) and Reed-Solomon block errors (1.75% versus 2.18% in multipath, 0.87% versus 1.18% in dense foliage). The proposed rear-view mirror location is ideal for minimum signal degradation compared to windshield, backlite, and dashboard antenna installations.
Keywords :
Reed-Solomon codes; digital audio broadcasting; digital radio; direct broadcasting by satellite; diversity reception; fading channels; multipath channels; radio receivers; satellite antennas; Reed-Solomon block error; antenna diversity system; composite body vehicles; dashboard antenna installation; dense foliage; fading channel; gain measurement; multipath channel; multipath terrestrial environment; on-vehicle antenna simulation; pattern gain diversity; rear-view mirror location; reference antenna system; satellite digital audio radio; signal degradation; Antenna measurements; Antennas; Diversity reception; Gain; Mirrors; Satellites; Vehicles; Antenna correlation; antenna diversity; antenna measurements; satellite radio;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2013.2264454