Satellite Communications: Reference Book: Satellite Communications, 3 Ed. Dennis Roddy Mcgraw-Hill International Ed
Satellite Communications: Reference Book: Satellite Communications, 3 Ed. Dennis Roddy Mcgraw-Hill International Ed
Reference book:
Satellite Communications, 3rd ed.
Dennis Roddy
McGraw-Hill International Ed.
1.1 Introduction
Source: http://www.intelsat.com
Coverage maps: Footprints
1.4 U.S DOMSAT (Domestic Satellites)
•Provide various telecommunication service within a
country
•In U.S.A all domsats in geostationary orbit
•Direct-to-home TV service can be classified as high
power, medium power, low power
1.5 Polar orbiting satellites
a2 b2
e
a
For an elliptical orbit, 0 < e < 1. When e = 0, the orbit
becomes circular.
2.3 Kepler`s Second Law
Kepler’s second law states that, for equal time intervals, a
satellite will sweep out equal areas in its orbital plane,
focused at the barycenter.
Thus the farther the satellite from earth, the longer it takes
to travel a given distance
2.4 Kepler’s Third Law
2
P (2.4)
n
Solution: 2
The mean motion, in rad/ day, is n :
1day
5rad
Thus, n 7.272 10
sec
• Line of nodes
The line joining the ascending and descending
nodes through the center of the earth.
•Inclination
The angle between the orbital plane and the
earth’s equatorial plane. It is measured at the
ascending node from the equator to the orbit,
going from east to north. The inclination is shown
as i in Fig. 2.3.
• Prograde orbit
An orbit in which the satellite moves in the same
direction as the earth’s rotation. Also known as a direct
orbit. The inclination of a prograde orbit always lies
between 0 and 90°
• Retrograde orbit
An orbit in which the satellite moves in a direction
counter to the earth’s rotation. The inclination of a
retrograde orbit always lies between 90 and 180°.
• Argument of perigee
The angle from ascending node to perigee, measured
in the orbital plane at the earth’s center, in the direction
of satellite motion.
Right ascension of the ascending node:
To define completely the position of the orbit in space, the
position of the ascending node is specified.
Mean anomaly:
Mean anomaly M gives an average value of the angular
position of the satellite with reference to the perigee
True anomaly:
The true anomaly is the angle from perigee to the satellite
position, measured at the earth’s center. This gives the
true angular position of the satellite in the orbit as a
function of time.
2.8.1 Effects of a nonspherical earth
1 K1 1 1.5 sin 2 i
n 3 0 … (2.10)
a 1 e
1.5
a 2 2
d
K (cos i )
dt … (2.12)
d
0 (t t0 ) … (2.15)
dt
2.8.2 Atmospheric Drag
2 … (2.17)
2.9 Inclined Orbits
A study of the general situation of a satellite in an inclined
elliptical orbit is complicated by the fact that different
parameters are referred to different reference frames.
1 minutes seconds
UTday (hours ) … (2.18)
24 24 3600
JD JDref
T … (2.20)
JC
Example 2.11: Find the time in Julian centuries from the reference
time January 0.5 1900 to 13h UT on 18 December 2000
2.9.4 Sidereal time
Sidereal time is time measured relative to the fixed
stars. It will be seen that one complete rotation of the
earth relative to the fixed stars is not a complete
rotation relative to the sun.
The sidereal day is defined as one complete rotation of
the earth relative to the fixed stars. One sidereal day
has 24 sidereal hours, one sidereal hour has 60
sidereal minutes, and one sidereal minute has 60
sidereal seconds
The relationships between the two systems, given in
Bate et al. (1971), are
r
a 1 e2 … (2.23)
1 e cos v
M n(t T )
… (2.24)
M 0 n(t0 T )
Therefore,
M0
T t0 … (2.25)
n
Hence, substituting this in Eq. (2.24) gives
M M 0 n(t t0 ) … (2.26)
solution
The specified values at epoch are mean motion n = 14.23304826
rev/ day, mean anomaly M0 = 246.6853°, and t0 = 223.79688452
days. In this instance it is only necessary to convert the mean
motion to degrees/ day, which is 360n.
Applying Eq. (2.25) gives
246.6853
T 223.79688452 -
14.23304826 360
223.79604425 days
Once the mean anomaly M is known, the next step is
to solve an equation known as Kepler’s equation.
Kepler’s equation is formulated in terms of an
intermediate variable E, known as the eccentric
anomaly, and is usually stated as
M E e sin E … (2.27)
M ( E e sin E ) 0 … (2.28)
Once E is found, v can be found from an equation known
as Gauss’equation, which is
v 1 e E
tan tan … (2.29)
2 1 e 2
Origin at the center of the earth (earth orbiting satellite only are
considered)
The positive x axis lies in the orbital plane and passes through the
perigee. Unit vector P points along the positive x axis as shown in
Fig. 2.8.
rI
r R~ rp … (2.33a)
J r
rK Q
where the transformation matrix R˜ is given by R
(cos cos sin sin cos i ) cos sin sin cos cos i
~
R sin cos cos sin cos i sin sin cos cos cos i
sin sin i cos sin i
Figure 2.10 Position vector R of the earth relative to the IJK frame
The angle between R and the equatorial plane is denoted by E.
LST = GST + EL
aE = 6378.1414 km
bE = 6365.755 km
The eccentricity of the earth is
2 2
aE bE
eE 0.08182 … (2.38)
aE
In Figs. 2.10 and 2.11, what is known as the
geocentric latitude is shown as E. This differs from
what is normally referred to as latitude.
An imaginary plumb line dropped from the earth
station makes an angle E with the equatorial plane,
as shown in Fig. 2.11. This is known as the geodetic
latitude, and for all practical purposes here, this can
be taken as the geographic latitude of the earth
station.
With the height of the earth station above mean sea level
denoted by H, the geocentric coordinates of the earth
station position are given in terms of the geodetic
coordinates by
aE
N … (2.39)
1 eE sin E
2 2
RK N 1 eE H sin E z
2
… (2.42)
Example 2.19, page 52 textbook
2.9.8 The topocentric-horizon coordinate system
The coordinates l and z given in Eqs. (2.40) and (2.42) are known
in terms of the earth station height and latitude.
For zero height, the angle E is known as the geocentric latitude
and is given by
2
tan E ( H 0 ) 1 eE tan E … (2.46)
Z
arcsin … (2.48)
We define an angle as,
E
arctan
S
Then the azimuth depends on which quadrant is in and is given
by Table 2.2.
S S Azimuth
degrees
- +
+ + 180 -
+ - 180 +
- - 360 -
h H SS hSS … (2.50)
2
rK N 1 eE h sin SS … (2.54)
EL = LST - GST
aE 6378km … (3.3)
hGSO aGSO aE
35,786km
The look angles for the ground station antenna are the
azimuth and elevation angles required at the antenna so
that it points directly at the satellite.
R 6371km … (3.5)
Figure 3.1: The geometry used in determining the look angles for a
geostationary satellite
ES = position of the earth station
SS = subsatellite point
S = the satellite
d = range of the earth station to the
satellite
= angle to be determine
2 types of triangles involved in the geometry of Fig. 3.1:
• spherical triangle (Fig. 3.2a)
• plane triangle (Fig. 3.2b)
c 90 E … (3.7)
B E SS … (3.8)
The angle between the polar mount and the local horizontal
plane is set equal to the earth station latitude, E. Thus the
boresight is parallel to the equatorial plane.
Next, the dish is tilted at an angle relative to the polar
mount until the boresight is pointing at a satellite
position.
Figure 3.5(b)
Referring to Fig 3.5(b),
The required tilt angle is:
Solution:
Given data E = 49, aGSO= 42164km, R = 6371km
Solution:
Given data E = 49, aGSO= 42164km, R = 6371km
For the geostationary case, the forces are mainly due to:
gravitational fields of the moon and the sun
nonspherical shape of the earth.
Other significant forces are solar radiation pressure and
reaction of the satellite itself to motor movement within
the satellite.
4.1 Introduction
Ionospheric scintillations
• are variations in the amplitude, phase, polarization, or
angle of arrival of radio waves.
• Caused by irregularities in the ionosphere which changes
with time.
• Effect of scintillations is fading of the signal.
Severe fades may last up to several minutes.
Polarization rotation:
• porduce rotation of the polarization of a signal (Faraday
rotation)
•When linearly polarized wave traverses in the
ionosphere, free electrons in the ionosphere are sets in
motion a force is experienced, which shift the
polarization of the wave.
•Inversely proportional to frequency squared.
• not a problem for frequencies above 10 GHz.
4.4 Rain Attenuation
aR p dB / km
b
… (4.2)
A L dB … (4.3)
where,
L = effective path length of the signal through the rain.
Because the rain density is unlikely to be uniform
over the actual path length, an effective path length
must be used rather than the actual (geometric)
length.
Figure 4.3 shows the geometry of the situation.
LG LS cos El … (4.6)
GPS
M … (12.1)
4r 2
An isotropic radiator with an input power equal to GPS
would produce the same flux density. Hence this
product is referred to as the equivalent isotropic
radiated power, or
EIRP GPS … (12.2)
G 10.472 fD
2
… (12.4)
Where,
f is the carrier frequency
PR M Aeff
2
EIRP GR 2
( EIRP )(GR )
4r 2 4 4r
… (12.7)
where
r = distance, or range, between the transmit and receive
antennas
GR = isotropic power gain of the receiving antenna. The
subscript R is used to identify the receiving antenna.
In decibel notation, equation (12.7) becomes
2
4r
PR EIRP GR 10 log … (12.8)
Antenna
pointing just
above the
horizon
Peak coincides
with peaks in
atmospheric
absorbtion loss
Antenna
pointing
overhead
N 0,ant kTant
Where,
N0,ant = Input noise energy from the antenna (Joules).
In noise power per unit bandwidth
Tant = Antenna noise temperature
k = Boltzman constant,
The output noise energy, No,out,
N 0,out Gk Tant Te
Where,
N0,out = Output noise energy
Te = Equivalent noise temperature of amplifier,
referred to the input
Tant = Antenna noise temperature
k = Boltzman constant
G = Amplifier gain
Total noise referred to the input, No,out/G
N 0,in k Tant Te
G G1G2
Cascaded amplifiers
N 0, 2
N 0,1 (12.21)
G1
Te 2
k Tant Te1
G1
TS is given by,
Te 2
TS Tant Te1 (12.23)
G1
From equation 12.23, the noise temperature of the
second stage is divided by the power gain of the first
stage when referred to the input
To keep the overall noise as low as possible the first
stage (usually LNA) should have high power gain as
well as low noise temperature
For any number of stages in cascade,
Te 2 Te 3
TS Tant Te1 ... (12.24)
G1 G1G2
12.5.4 Noise Factor
where,
Gk T0 Te FGkT0
or
Te F 1T0 (12.26)
TNW ,i Tx L 1 (12.30)
TS Tant Te1
L 1T0 L F 1T0
(12.32)
G1 G1
Example 12.7
For the system shown in Fig12.6a, the receiver
noise figure is 12dB, the cable loss is 5dB, the LNA
gain is 50dB, and its noise temperature 150K. The
antenna noise temperature is 35K. Calculate the
noise temperature referred to the input.
Solution:
Main receiver, F 10 15.85
1.2
TS 35 150
3.16 1 290 3.16 15.85 1 290
185K
105 105
Example 12.8
Repeat the calculation when the system of Fig.12.6a is
arranged as shown in Fig.12.6b.
Solution:
The cable now precedes the LNA, the equivalent noise
temperature referred to the cable input is
3.16 15.85 1 290
TS 35 3.16 1 290 3.16 150
105
1136 K
C
N PR PN
… (12.33)
Equations (12.17) and (12.18) may be used for [PR]
and [PN], resulting in
C
N EIRP GR LOSSES k TS BN … (12.33)
G
T G R TS dBK -1 … (12.35)
Since PN = kTNBN = NoBN, then
C C
N N B
0 N
C
BN
N0
therefore
C C
BN … (12.37)
N0 N
C G
EIRP LOSSES k dBHz … (12.38)
N0 T
Ex.12.9:
In a link-budget calculation at 12GHz, the free
space loss is 206dB, the antenna pointing loss is
1dB, and the atmospheric absorption is 2dB. The
receiver feeder losses are 1dB. The EIRP is
48dBW. Calculate the carrier-to-noise spectral
density ratio
Solution:
Data are computed in tabular form, with losses
entered as negative numbers. Also, recall that
k 228.6 decilogs thus k 228.6 decilogs
The final result, 86.1 dBHz is the algebraic sum of the
quantities given.
12.7 The Uplink
The uplink earth station is transmitting the signal and
the satellite is receiving it.
Equation (12.38) can be applied to the uplink, but with
subscript U denotes that the uplink is being considered.
C G
EIRP U LOSSES U k
… (12.39)
N 0 U T U
TWTA
The traveling-wave tube amplifiers (TWTA) are widely
used in transponders to provide the final output power
required to the transmit antenna.
where,
e0 = output voltage
ei = input voltage
2 f 2 f1 f 2 f and 2 f1 f 2 f1 f
2
Let, A0 10 log … (12.43)
4
C G
EIRP D LOSSES D k … (12.53)
N0 D T D
C G
N EIRP D T LOSSES D k B … (12.54)
D D
The required EIRP is 38dBW or 6.3kW
12.8.1 Output back-off
(12.53) becomes
C G
EIRP
S D BO o LOSSES D k … (12.55)
N0 D T D
12.8.2 Satellite TWTA output
Figure 12.9
(a) Combined uplink
and downlink
(b) Power flow
diagram for (a)
Noise will be introduced on the uplink at the satellite
receiver input.
PNU = noise power per unit bandwidth
PRU = average carrier at the same point
where
= the system power gain from satellite input to
earth station input
This includes the satellite transponder and
transmit antenna gains, the downlink losses, and the
earth station receive antenna gain and feeder losses.
The noise at the satellite input also appears at the earth
station input multiplied by , and in addition, the earth
station introduces its own noise, denoted by PND.
Thus the end-of-link noise is PNU + PND.
The C/No ratio for the downlink alone, not counting the
PNU contribution, is PR/PND, and the combined C/No ratio
at the ground receiver is PR/(PNU + PND).
The power flow diagram is shown in Fig. 12.9 b.
PR
Equation (12.61) shows that to obtain the combined value
of C/N0, the reciprocals of the individual values must be
added to obtain the N0/C ratio and then the reciprocal of
this taken to get C/N0.