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Coherence Bandwidth

Coherence bandwidth is a measurement of the range of frequencies over which a communications channel can be considered flat or where frequencies experience similar fading. It is approximated by taking the inverse of the multipath time delay spread. A larger coherence bandwidth means frequencies fade correlatively over a wider range. Cellular paths have varying coherence bandwidths depending on their multipath spread. The 1.25 MHz bandwidth of CDMA was designed to be larger than typical urban coherence bandwidths so that fading would not impact the whole signal. In an example, a path with a 0.19 μs delay spread corresponds to a 5.3 MHz coherence bandwidth, within which the IS-95 signal bandwidth falls.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
222 views2 pages

Coherence Bandwidth

Coherence bandwidth is a measurement of the range of frequencies over which a communications channel can be considered flat or where frequencies experience similar fading. It is approximated by taking the inverse of the multipath time delay spread. A larger coherence bandwidth means frequencies fade correlatively over a wider range. Cellular paths have varying coherence bandwidths depending on their multipath spread. The 1.25 MHz bandwidth of CDMA was designed to be larger than typical urban coherence bandwidths so that fading would not impact the whole signal. In an example, a path with a 0.19 μs delay spread corresponds to a 5.3 MHz coherence bandwidth, within which the IS-95 signal bandwidth falls.

Uploaded by

Lawrence Chen
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Coherence bandwidth

Coherence bandwidth is a statistical measurement of the range of frequencies over which the channel can be considered "flat", or in other words the approximate maximum bandwidth or frequency interval over which two frequencies of a signal are likely to experience comparable or correlated amplitude fading. If the multipath time delay spread equals D seconds, then the coherence bandwidth the equation: in rad/s is given approximately by

The coherence bandwidth varies over cellular or PCS communications paths because the multipath spread D varies from path to path.

[edit] Application
Frequencies within a coherence bandwidth of one another tend to all fade in a similar or correlated fashion. One reason for designing the CDMA IS-95 waveform with a bandwidth of approximately 1.25 MHz is because in many urban signaling environments the coherence bandwidth Wc is significantly less than 1.25 MHz. Therefore, when fading occurs it occurs only over a relatively small fraction of the total CDMA signal bandwidth. The portion of the signal bandwidth over which fading does not occur typically contains enough signal power to sustain reliable communications.This is the bandwidth over which the channel transfer function remains virtually constant.

[edit] Example
If the delay spread D over a particular cellular communication path in an urban environment is .19 s, then using equation above, the coherence bandwidth is approximately 5.3 MHz, of which the IS-95 bandwidth is only approximately 23 %.

[edit] See also

Coherence time

Coherence length

Coherence time
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search For an electromagnetic wave, the coherence time is the time over which a propagating wave (especially a laser or maser beam) may be considered coherent. In other words, it is the time interval within which its phase is, on average, predictable. In long-distance transmission systems, the coherence time may be reduced by propagation factors such as dispersion, scattering, and diffraction. Coherence time, , is calculated by dividing the coherence length by the phase velocity of light in a medium; approximately given by

where is the central wavelength of the source, and is the spectral width of the source in units of frequency and wavelength respectively, and c is the speed of light in vacuum. A single mode fiber laser has a linewidth of a few kHz. The Schawlow-Townes limit for some cw lasers can be below 1 Hz. Hydrogen masers have linewidth around 1 Hz;[1] their coherence length approximately corresponds to the distance from the Earth to the Moon.

[edit] See also


Physics portal

Atomic coherence Coherence time (communications systems)

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