LinkBudgetAnalysis
LinkBudgetAnalysis
LinkBudgetAnalysis
Place: E6
Time: Tue. 09:00-12:00
Textbooks:
1. Molisch, Wireless Communications, 2nd Ed., Wiley
2. Sklar, Digital Communications: Fundamentals and Applications, 2nd Ed., Prentice Hall
Assessment:
Attendance (5 %)
1 Midterm Exam (30 %)
5-6 Popup quiz (25 %)
1 Final Exam (40 %)
Ultimately gives us the system requirements for a desirable performance of the link.
Error performance depends on the received Signal-to-Noise Ratio per bit (SNR/bit), , defined as
Noise PSD
Rate
Average noise
power SNR
LOSS HAPPENS HERE ! (HOW ?)
Spring 2017 ELE 492 FUNDAMENTALS OF WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS 15
Sources of Signal Loss and Noise
1. Bandlimiting Loss 6. Multiple-carrier 12. Atmospheric Loss and 17. Galactic or Cosmic, Star
Intermodulation Products Noise and Terrestrial Noise
2. Intersymbol Interference (non-linear devices)
(ISI) 13. Space Loss 18. Feeder Line Loss
7. Modulation Loss (message
3. Local Oscillator Phase content power) 14. Adjacent Channel 19. Receiver Noise
Noise Interference
8. Antenna Efficiency 20. Implementation Loss
4. AM/PM Conversion 15. Co-channel Interference
(Amplitude variations) 9. Radome Loss and Noise 21. Imperfect
16. Intermodulation Noise Synchronization
5. Limiter Loss or 10. Pointing Loss
Enhancement
11. Polarization Loss
W/m2 (4d2 = ?)
Directive gain
in a direction
Power radiated
by an isotropic
radiator
(If there is no loss or impedance mismatch, the antenna gain is equal to the directive
Gain, which is the assumption here.)
Gr=1
Received power Pr for an isotropic receive antenna (gain of the transmit antenna is Gt)
for the Tx antenna
?
It is sometimes useful to calculate Pr for d = 1 m and then scale d to find the actual Pr
No is dependent on the ambient noise (thermal noise) T. Similarly, the terminology effective noise temperature
can be use for noise with non-thermal origin (galactic, atmospheric, man-made noise, etc).
Receiver figure-of-merit
(numerator: gains, denominator: losses).
Average received signal power Bandwidth
Bit energy
Noise PSD
Rate
Average noise power SNR
or
Nai: amplifier noise referred to the input port No = - 204 dBW/Hz @ T0 = 290 oK
G: amplifier gain.
T0 = 290 oK: reference temperature, TR: effective noise temperature of the receiver (network).
Power Loss:
Gain:
If the ambient temperature is Tg = T0 = 290 oK (above derivation assumes line temp. is at Tg)
Design goal: keep F1 as low as possible & keep G1 as high as possible (conflicting goals!).
First stage should be a low-noise-(pre)amplifier (LNA)!
System temperature is
(Study Example 5.7 and Sections 5.4.4 and 5.5.6.1 for satellite comm.s)