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Mean Square Error (MSE)

Mean square error (MSE) is a measurement that accounts for noise, distortion, and interference in a signal. Distortion can result from issues with cables or signal degradation from multipath interference or obstacles blocking the Fresnel zone. Interference can come from other transmitters or indoor equipment. MSE values are compared to thresholds for each modulation type to evaluate link quality, with lower numbers indicating better performance. Potential causes of unacceptable MSE include incorrect cross-polarization interference cancellation parameters, insufficient isolation between polarized signals, inadequate performance for high-order quadrature amplitude modulation, or imbalance between paths in a dual-polarization link.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
259 views

Mean Square Error (MSE)

Mean square error (MSE) is a measurement that accounts for noise, distortion, and interference in a signal. Distortion can result from issues with cables or signal degradation from multipath interference or obstacles blocking the Fresnel zone. Interference can come from other transmitters or indoor equipment. MSE values are compared to thresholds for each modulation type to evaluate link quality, with lower numbers indicating better performance. Potential causes of unacceptable MSE include incorrect cross-polarization interference cancellation parameters, insufficient isolation between polarized signals, inadequate performance for high-order quadrature amplitude modulation, or imbalance between paths in a dual-polarization link.
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Microwave Links

What is Mean Square Error ?

Mean Square Error (MSE) is similar to Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) except that it
accounts for distortion and interference in addition to noise power.
Distortion may come from several sources such as bad Ethernet cables (poor
shield, damaged, or low quality), path degradations such as multipath, or Fresnel
zone encroachment.

Interference can come from other transmitters on the tower, as well as from
sources inside an indoor shelter. High power transmitters inside a shelter can
cause interference when near the PoE device or when located very close to the
cabling.
There are maximum acceptable MSE values for each modulation which are
useful in determining the quality of the link. The MSE value reported is only
relevant to one tx-rx path, so the MSE of each tx-rx path must be evaluated to
verify the link is operating as expected. The lower the number the better, so a
-35dB is better than a -30dB.

Other possible causes for unacceptable MSE

These include

 XPIC parameters are incorrect


 Insufficient isolation between polarisations on an XPIC link
 Insufficient performance to support high QAM modulation
 Inbalance between paths on an XPIC dual polarity link

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