Link Budget
Link Budget
Link Budget
Link budget
A link budget is an accounting of all of the power gains and losses that a communication signal
experiences in a telecommunication system; from a transmitter, through a communication
medium such as radio waves, cable, waveguide, or optical fiber, to the receiver. It is an equation
giving the received power from the transmitter power, after the attenuation of the transmitted
signal due to propagation, as well as the antenna gains and feedline and other losses, and
amplification of the signal in the receiver or any repeaters it passes through. A link budget is a
design aid, calculated during the design of a communication system to determine the received
power, to ensure that the information is received intelligibly with an adequate signal-to-noise ratio.
Randomly varying channel gains such as fading are taken into account by adding some margin
depending on the anticipated severity of its effects. The amount of margin required can be reduced
by the use of mitigating techniques such as antenna diversity or frequency hopping.
Received power (dBm) = transmitted power (dBm) + gains (dB) − losses (dB)
Power levels are expressed in (dBm), Power gains and losses are expressed in decibels (dB), which
is a logarithmic measurement, so adding decibels is equivalent to multiplying the actual power
ratios.
In radio systems
For a line-of-sight radio system, the primary source of loss is the decrease of the signal power due
to uniform propagation, proportional to the inverse square of the distance (geometric spreading).
Transmitting antennas are for the most part neither isotropic (an imaginary class of antenna
with uniform radiation in 3 dimensions) nor omnidirectional (a real class of antenna with
uniform radiation in 2 dimensions).
The use of omnidirectional antennas is rare in telecommunication systems, so almost every
link budget equation must consider antenna gain.
Transmitting antennas typically concentrate the signal power in a favoured direction, normally
that in which the receiving antenna is placed.
Transmitter power is effectively increased (in the direction of highest antenna gain). This
systemic gain is expressed by including the antenna gain in the link budget.
The receiving antenna is also typically directional, and when properly oriented collects more
power than an isotropic antenna would; as a consequence, the receiving antenna gain (in
decibels from isotropic, dBi) adds to the received power.
The antenna gains (transmitting or receiving) are scaled by the wavelength of the radiation in
question. This step may not be required if adequate systemic link budgets are achieved.
Simplifications needed
Often link budget equations are messy and complex, so standard practices have evolved to simplify
the Friis transmission equation into the link budget equation. It includes the transmit and receive
antenna gain, the free space path loss and additional losses and gains, assuming line of sight
between the transmitter and receiver.
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The wavelength (or frequency) term is part of the free space loss part of the link budget.
The distance term is also considered in the free space loss.
In practical situations (deep space telecommunications, weak signal DXing etc.) other sources of
signal loss must also be accounted for
Endgame
If the estimated received power is sufficiently large (typically relative to the receiver sensitivity),
which may be dependent on the communications protocol in use, the link will be useful for sending
data. The amount by which the received power exceeds receiver sensitivity is called the link
margin.
Equation
A link budget equation including all these effects, expressed logarithmically, might look like this:
where:
The loss due to propagation between the transmitting and receiving antennas, often called the path
loss, can be written in dimensionless form by normalizing the distance to the wavelength:
units)
When substituted into the link budget equation above, the result is the logarithmic form of the
Friis transmission equation.
In some cases, it is convenient to consider the loss due to distance and wavelength separately, but
in that case, it is important to keep track of which units are being used, as each choice involves a
differing constant offset. Some examples are provided below.
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These alternative forms can be derived by substituting wavelength with the ratio of propagation
velocity (c, approximately 3 × 108 m/s) divided by frequency, and by inserting the proper
conversion factors between km or miles and meters, and between MHz and (1/s).
Non-line-of-sight radio
Because of building obstructions such as walls and ceilings, propagation losses indoors can be
significantly higher. This occurs because of a combination of attenuation by walls and ceilings, and
blockage due to equipment, furniture, and even people.
For example, a "2 by 4" wood stud wall with drywall on both sides results in about 6 dB loss per
wall at 2.4 GHz.[2]
Older buildings may have even greater internal losses than new buildings due to materials and
line of sight issues.
Experience has shown that line-of-sight propagation holds only for about the first 3 meters.
Beyond 3 meters propagation losses indoors can increase at up to 30 dB per 30 meters in dense
office environments. This is a good rule-of-thumb, in that it is conservative (it overstates path loss
in most cases). Actual propagation losses may vary significantly depending on building
construction and layout.
The attenuation of the signal is highly dependent on the frequency of the signal.
This means that there is always a crossover distance beyond which the loss in a guided medium
will exceed that of a line-of-sight path of the same length.
Long distance fiber-optic communication became practical only with the development of ultra-
transparent glass fibers. A typical path loss for single mode fiber is 0.2 dB/km,[3] far lower than
any other guided medium.
Earth–Moon–Earth communications
Link budgets are important in Earth–Moon–Earth communications. As the albedo of the Moon is
very low (maximally 12% but usually closer to 7%), and the path loss over the 770,000 kilometre
return distance is extreme (around 250 to 310 dB depending on VHF-UHF band used, modulation
format and Doppler shift effects), high power (more than 100 watts) and high-gain antennas (more
than 20 dB) must be used.
In practice, this limits the use of this technique to the spectrum at VHF and above.
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The Moon must be above the horizon in order for EME communications to be possible.
Voyager program
The Voyager program spacecraft have the highest known path loss (308 dB as of 2002[4]: 26 ) and
lowest link budgets of any telecommunications circuit. The Deep Space Network has been able to
maintain the link at a higher than expected bitrate through a series of improvements, such as
increasing the antenna size from 64 m to 70 m for a 1.2 dB gain, and upgrading to low noise
electronics for a 0.5 dB gain in 2000–2001. During the Neptune flyby, in addition to the 70-m
antenna, two 34-m antennas and twenty-seven 25-m antennas were used to increase the gain by
5.6 dB, providing additional link margin to be used for a 4× increase in bitrate.[4]: 35
See also
Friis transmission equation
Antenna gain-to-noise-temperature
Isotropic radiator
Radiation pattern
Multipath propagation
RF planning
References
1. "Archived copy" (https://web.archive.org/web/20050901001655/http://people.deas.harvard.edu/
~jones/es151/prop_models/propagation.html). people.deas.harvard.edu. Archived from the
original (http://people.deas.harvard.edu/~jones/es151/prop_models/propagation.html) on 1
September 2005. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
2. http://www.sss-mag.com/pdf/an9804.pdf
3. "Archived copy" (https://web.archive.org/web/20070928054321/http://www.corningcablesystem
s.com/web/library/litindex.nsf/$ALL/EVO-412-EN/$FILE/EVO-412-EN.pdf) (PDF).
www.corningcablesystems.com. Archived from the original (http://www.corningcablesystems.co
m/web/library/litindex.nsf/$ALL/EVO-412-EN/$FILE/EVO-412-EN.pdf) (PDF) on 28 September
2007. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
4. JPL Deep Space Communications and Navigation Systems (March 2002). "Voyager
Telecommunications" (https://descanso.jpl.nasa.gov/DPSummary/Descanso4--Voyager_ed.pd
f) (PDF). descanso.jpl.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2017-08-04.
External links
Link budget calculator for wireless LAN (http://home.deds.nl/~pa0hoo/helix_wifi/linkbudgetcalc/
wlan_budgetcalc.html)
Link budget tutorial (http://www.sss-mag.com/pdf/an9804.pdf)
Point-to-point link budget calculator (http://www.ligowave.com/linkcalc)
MUOS Link budget calculator/planner (http://www.questinygroup.com/muos)
Example LTE, GSM and UMTS Link Budgets (https://sites.google.com/site/lteencyclopedia/lte-r
adio-link-budgeting-and-rf-planning/lte-link-budget-comparison)
Python link budget calculator for satellites (https://github.com/harrison-caudill/pylink)
Small satellites link budget (with python examples) (https://nbviewer.jupyter.org/github/kirlf/cub
esats/blob/master/LinkBudget/LB.ipynb)
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