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Satellite Link Design

&
Power Budget For
Uplink
Shalini Ghosh (22)
Surojit Halder (27)
ECE 4th Year
Basic Transmission Theory:
 The calculation of power received by an earth station
from a satellite is fundamental to the understanding of
satellite communication.
 Consider a transmitting source, in free space, radiating
a total power Pt watts uniformly in all directions.
 Such source is called isotropic.
 At a distance R meters from isotropic source, flux
density crossing thesurface
F= Pt / 4 πR2 (W/m2 )
 For a transmitter with output Pt watts driving a
lossless antenna with gain Gt , the flux density at
distance R meters is

F= Pt Gt / 4 πR2 (W/m2 )

 The product Pt Gt is called effective isotropic radiated


power or EIRP, it describes the combination of
transmitting power & antenna gain in terms of an
equivalent isotropic source withpower Pt Gt watts.
 Collecting various factors, we can write
Power received
= (EIRP * Receiving antenna gain / pathloss)watts
 In decibel, we have
Pr = EIRP + Gr – Lp ……………………..(B)
Where EIRP= 10log10 (Pt Gt ) dBW
Gr = 10log10 (4π Ae / λ2 ) dB
Lp = 10log10 (4 πR / λ )2 dB
 Equation B represents an idealized case, in which there
are no additional losses in thelink.
 In practice, we need to take account of a more complex
situation in which we have losses in atmosphere due to
attenuation by oxygen, water vapor and rain, losses in
the antennas at each end of the link.
 So equation B can be writtenas
Pr = EIRP + Gr – Lp – La - Lta – Lra dBW
where La = attenuation in atmosphere
Lta = losses associated with transmitting antenna
Lra = losses associated with receiving antenna
G/T Ratio for earth stations:
 The link equation can be rewritten in terms of (C/N)
at the earthstations
LinkBudget:
C/N ratio calculation is simplified by the use of link
budgets.
A link budget is a tabular method for evaluating the
received power and noise power.
Link budgets invariably use decibel units for all
quantities so that signal and noise powers can be
calculated by addition and subtraction.
Since it is usually impossible to design a satellite link at
the first attempt, link budgets make the task much easier
because, once a link budget has been established, it is
easy to change any of the parameters and recalculate the
result.
Uplink Design:
 The Uplink design is easier than the downlink, since
an accurately specified carrier power must be
presented at the satellite transponder and it is often
feasible to use much higher power transmitters at
earth stations than can be used on a satellite.
 The cost of transmitters tend to be high compared
with the cost of receiving equipment in satellite
communication system.
 Earth station transmitter power is set by the power
level required at the input to the transponder.

 Analysis of the uplink requires calculation of the


power level at the input to the transponder so that the
uplink C/N ratio can befound.

 The link equation is used to make this calculation.

 Let (C/N)up be the specified C/N ratio in the


transponder, measured in an noise bandwidth Bn Hz
 At frequencies above 10 GHz, propagating
disturbances in the form of fading in rain causes the
received power level at the satellite to fall.

 This lowers the uplink C/N ratio in the transponder ,


which lowers the overall (C/N)o ratio in the earth
station receiver.
Satellite Communication Link
Design Procedure:
1. Determine the frequency band in whichsystem must
operate. Comparative designs may be required to
help make the selection.
2. Determine the communications parametersof the
satellite. Estimate any values that are not known.
3. Determine the parameters of thetransmitting and
receiving earth stations.
4. Start at the transmitting earth station. Establish an
uplink budget and a transponder noise power to find
(C/N)up in thetransponder.
5. Find the output power of the transponder based on
transponder gain or output backoff.
6. Establish a downlink power and noise budget forthe
receiving earth station. Calculate (C/N)dn and
(C/N)o for a station at the edge of the coverage zone.
7. Calculate S/N or BER in the basebandchannel. Find
the link margin.
8. Evaluate the result and compare with the
specification requirements. Change parameters of
the system as required to obtain acceptable (C/N)0 or
S/N or BER values. This may require several trial
designs.
9. Determine the propagation conditions under which
the link must operate. Calculate outage times for the
uplinks and downlinks.
10. Redesign the system by changing some parameters if
the link margins are inadequate. Check that all
parameters are reasonable, and that the design can
be implemented within the expectedbudget.
Thank You!

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