NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Propagation experiment of COMETS Ka/Q-band communication link for future satellite cellular systemMobile/Personal Satellite Communication Systems in L/S-bands are going into the operational phase. In the future, they will be operated in much higher frequency bands, for example in Ka-band, because the available bandwidth in L-band is limited. Systems with large on-board antennas in higher frequencies allow the same configuration as terrestrial cellular radio systems, since the on-board antennas will have many small spot beams. This may be true especially in a low earth orbit system such as Teledesic, which will use Ka-band. The most important parameter of Satellite Cellular may be cell size, that is, a diameter of the spot beam. A system designer needs the local correlation data in a cell and the size of the correlative area. On the other hand, the most significant difficulty of Ka and higher band systems is the countermeasure to rain attenuation. Many-cell systems can manage the limited power of on-board transponders by controlling output power of each beam depending on the rain attenuation of each cell. If the cell size is equal to the correlative area, the system can probably achieve the maximum performance. Propagation data of Ka and higher band obtained in the past shows a long term cumulative feature and link availability, but do not indicate the correlative area. The Japanese COMETS satellite, which will be launched in February 1997, has transponders in Ka and Q-band. The CRL is planning to measure the correlative area using 21 GHz and 44 GHz CW transmissions from the COMETS.
Document ID
19960000449
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Hase, Yoshihiro
(Communications Research Lab. Tokyo, Japan)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: JPL, Proceedings of the 19th NASA Propagation Experimenters Meeting (NAPEX 19) and the 7th Advanced Communications Technology Satellite (ACTS) Propagation Studies Workshop (APSW 7) p 71-82 (SEE N96-10
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Accession Number
96N10449
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available