Lecture 1 Communication Systems
Lecture 1 Communication Systems
Communication Systems
Spring 2022
Lecture 1:
Power Calculations and Channel Problems in
Wireless Communications
• Propagation Models
Aim:
1- To predict the average received signal strength at
a given distance from the transmitter - Large scale
propagation models, hundreds or thousands of
meters.
- Generally
1
Pr
P r0 r
r = Or P = P0 − 10 log
P0 r r0
Ratio
units - W
units - dBW units – 1 W
Isotropic
Source
P watts
Sphere with
surface area 4r2
square meters
16
Isotropic Antenna
• An isotropic antenna radiating a power P (watts)
creates a power density at a far distance r according
to
S = P / ( 4 r2 ) W/m2
4 Ae
G=
2
• Ae is related to the physical area of the antenna, Ap , by the antenna
efficiency, ηA :
Ae = A Ap
• Typical values of ηA are 50-80%; assume 60% if no value is given
Free space model Pr 12
r
Pt
Gt
Pr
Gr
S = P / (4r2)
r W/m2
Isotropic
Source
P watts
Sphere with
surface area 4r2
square meters
• For a directive transmitting antenna with gain Gt, the power
density is given by:
S = Pt Gt / ( 4 r2 ) W/m2
• For a distance R between the earth station (Tx) and the
Satellite (Rx), the received power Pr is given by
Pr = S (W/m2 ) Ae Watt
Pr = Pt Gt Ae / ( 4 R2 )
Where Ae is the effective area of the receiving antenna
4 Ae Gr 2
Gr = Ae =
2
4
• Substituting, the received power Pr (Watt) can be expressed as
Pt Gt Gr 2
Pr =
(4 ) 2 R 2
Pt Gt Gr 2
Pr (dB) = 10 log 2 2
(4 ) R
Pr (dB) = Pt (dB) + Gt (dB) + Gr (dB) + 20 log( ) − 20 log(R ) − 20 log(4 )
L=
Pt
=
(4R )2
= =
(4R )2 (4R )2
Pr Gt Gr 2
(1)(1)2
2
Lp =
(4R ) 2
2
For R =10 Km
‣If the received power, minus all losses, is greater than the
minimum received signal level of the receiving radio, then
a link is possible.
Pt Gt Gr 2
Pr =
(4 ) 2 R 2
Lp =
Pt
=
(4R )
2
Pr 2
• Now, the received power Pr (Watt) can be expressed as
Pt Gt Gr EIRP Gr
Pr = Or Pr =
Lp Lp
• Other effects need to be accounted for in the transmission equation:
La = Losses due to attenuation in atmosphere
Lta = Losses associated with transmitting antenna
Lra = Losses associates with receiving antenna
Lpol = Losses due to polarization mismatch
Lbeam = Edge of beam shape loss
Lother = (any other known loss - as much detail as available)
Called miscellaneous losses (fading margin, body loss, other
losses...)
Lr = additional Losses at receiver (after receiving antenna)
Pt Gt Gr
Pr =
L p La Lta Lra L pol Lbeam Lother Lr
Translating to dBs
• The transmission formula can be written in dB as:
Rx Pr
Simple Satellite Link Power Budget
Parameter Value Totals Units Parameter Value Totals Units
Frequency 11.75 GHz
Transmitter Receive Antenna
Transmitter Power 40.00 dBm Random Loss 0.50 dB
Modulation Loss 3.00 dB Diameter 1.5 m
Transmission Line 0.75 dB Aperture Efficiency 0.6 none
Loss
Transmitted Power 36.25 dBm Gain 43.10 dBi
Polarization Loss 0.20 dB
Transmit Antenna Effective RX Ant. 42.40 dBi
Gain
Diameter 0.5 m
Aperture Efficiency 0.55 none Received Power -98.54 dBm
Transmit Antenna 33.18 dBi
Gain
Ts K = Ts 0C + 273
Noise Spectral Density
N = KTsB➔ N/B = N0 is the noise spectral density (density of
noise power per hertz): N kTs B
N0 = = = kTs (Watt/Hz)
B B
Example:
An antenna has a noise temperature of 35 K and is matched into
a receiver which has a noise temperature of 100 K. Calculate (a) the
noise power density and (b) the noise power for a bandwidth of 36
MHz.
Solution
50
45
40
35
Ta (K)
30
25
20
15
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Elevation Angle (degrees)
System Noise Temperature (Tsys) and System Noise Power
The aim now is to determine the amount of noise power that a system such as a satellite
transponder generates knowing the different components of the transponder, their gains, and
their noise temperatures. Consider the following system with different noise temperature as
shown below:
Now, we can represent the thermal noise of each block as a signal at the input of each
block as:
The block diagram above can be reduced into a single block as shown below by
bringing the different noises forward (remember that a signal after a block with gain
G is equivalent to the signal divided by G before that block), and then collecting all
gains of different blocks into a single gain (remember that several cascaded gains
are combined by multiplying the gains by each other):
Tsys = Tant+Ttrans
Where
N = kTs B (Watt)
1- Make B as small as possible – just enough bandwidth to
accept all of the signal power (C)
C Pr Pr
= =
N Pn KTs B
Lp =
Example
Satellite at 40,000 km (range)
Transmits 2W
Antenna gain Gt = 17 dB and operating frequency = 11GHz
Calculate: a. Power density on earth’s surface
b. Power received by antenna with effective aperture of 10m2
c. Gain of receiving antenna.
d. Received C/N assuming Ts =152 K, and BW =500 MHz
Solution
a. (Gt = 17 dB = 50)
EIRP Pt Gt 2 50
Power Density S = = =
4R 2 4R 2 4 (4 107 ) 2
= 4.97 10-15 W/m 2 = −143 dBW/m 2
(Solving in dB…)
EIRP = ( Pt + Gt ) = 3 + 17 = 20 dBW
S = Pt + Gt − 10 log 4 − 20 log 4 107 = −143 dBW/m 2
b. Received Power
Pr = S A e = (4.97 10 -15 ) 10
Pr = 4.97 10 -14 W = −133dBW