Diversity reception of COMSTAR SHF beacons with the Tampa triad, 1978 - 1981
Abstract
The results of 19 GHz downlink rain attenuation diversity measurements in Tampa over a 29 month period (1978-1980), and the results of a 20 GHz diversity study during the summer of 1981, using the remaining COMSTAR beacon are presented. At 19 GHz, site separations of 11, 16, and 20 km were used, with reception at high elevation angle (about 57 deg). At 29 GHz, only the 16 km baseline was employed, with elevation angle about 32 deg. Almost identical long term performance of the two longer baselines indicates that for separations above about 15 km diversity improvement was not sensitive to baseline length or direction. Diversity improvement at 29 GHz with the 16 km baseline was similar to that predicted by scaling the 19 GHz results of the previous seasons. Also discussed are the type of attenuation distributions and typical fade durations to be found under persistent convective conditions. For rain climates like Tampa's, site diversity in some form will be required for high reliability SHF satellite links. The diversity data may be helpful in designing schemes for resource sharing among numbers of links.
- Publication:
-
Final Report GTE Labs
- Pub Date:
- January 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982gte..rept.....D
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Attenuation;
- Downlinking;
- Rain;
- Reception Diversity;
- Satellite Transmission;
- Site Selection;
- Superhigh Frequencies;
- Climate;
- Comstar Satellites;
- Elevation Angle;
- Florida;
- Signal Fading;
- Summer;
- Communications and Radar