Ice depolarization on low-angle 2 GHz satellite downlinks
Abstract
The impact of ice depolarization on the statistical performance of satellite downlinks were investigated. Propagation data recorded during 1979 and 1980 to see what impact of ice depolarization on link performance were analyzed. The effects on the cross polarization discrimination (XPD) statistics amounted to at most a 2 to 4 dB reduction in the XPD values which rain would have produced for a given percentage of time. Ice depolarization had no effect on the statistics of XPD values below the 0.01% level. Most of the severe ice depolarization events were associated with drops in barometric pressure and the passage of intense cold fronts through our area. Ice contents as the product of three individually undetermined quantities were defined: ice particle density, ice cloud thickness, and the average volume of the ice crystals. It is indicated that populations of ice particle with ice contents on the order of 0.002 m4/m3 are probably responsible for the lower values of measured XPD.
- Publication:
-
In AGARD Characteristics of the Lower Atmosphere Influencing Radio Wave Propagation 11 p (SEE N84-24943 15-32
- Pub Date:
- February 1984
- Bibcode:
- 1984clai.agarQ....S
- Keywords:
-
- Cross Polarization;
- Depolarization;
- Discrimination;
- Downlinking;
- Ice;
- Satellite Transmission;
- Wave Propagation;
- Atmospheric Models;
- Ice Clouds;
- Ice Formation;
- Polarization (Charge Separation);
- Statistics;
- Communications and Radar