DocumentCode
758573
Title
Optimal Bandwidth Assignment on Up- and Downlinks of Satellite with Buffer Capacity
Author
Suda, Tatsuya ; Miyahara, Hideo ; Hasegawa, Toshiharu
Author_Institution
Kyoto Univ., Kyoto, Japan
Volume
28
Issue
10
fYear
1980
fDate
10/1/1980 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1809
Lastpage
1818
Abstract
This paper considers a satellite communication system with the slotted ALOHA access mode where the satellite is assumed to have on-board regeneration ability and the finite buffer capacity for storing noncollided packets from the uplink. The system is analyzed with the downlink bandwidth restricted to
of the uplink bandwidth, and with the conventional slotted ALOHA system where
and the buffer size at the satellite is equal to zero. Maximum throughput and throughput-delay characteristics of this system are analytically obtained. The satellite is given an optimal buffer size to achieve maximum throughput and minimum packet transmission delay. It is shown that the constraints that lead to the downlink bandwidth being lower than the uplink bandwidth do not necessarily result in throughput penalties in a buffered satellite system. Furthermore, when the total bandwidth which can be divided between up- and downlinks is given, if two or three times that of the downlink is assigned to the uplink and if the satellite has buffer storage space only for a few packets, we show that maximum throughput of the system will be improved about 40 percent with little change in delay characteristics in comparison with that of the conventional slotted ALOHA system where the given total bandwidth is equally divided between up- and downlinks.
of the uplink bandwidth, and with the conventional slotted ALOHA system where
and the buffer size at the satellite is equal to zero. Maximum throughput and throughput-delay characteristics of this system are analytically obtained. The satellite is given an optimal buffer size to achieve maximum throughput and minimum packet transmission delay. It is shown that the constraints that lead to the downlink bandwidth being lower than the uplink bandwidth do not necessarily result in throughput penalties in a buffered satellite system. Furthermore, when the total bandwidth which can be divided between up- and downlinks is given, if two or three times that of the downlink is assigned to the uplink and if the satellite has buffer storage space only for a few packets, we show that maximum throughput of the system will be improved about 40 percent with little change in delay characteristics in comparison with that of the conventional slotted ALOHA system where the given total bandwidth is equally divided between up- and downlinks.Keywords
Buffered communications; Satellite communication, multiaccess; Artificial satellites; Bandwidth; Buffer storage; Channel capacity; Downlink; Operations research; Physics; Satellite broadcasting; Satellite communication; Throughput;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0090-6778
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TCOM.1980.1094597
Filename
1094597
Link To Document