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Paulson 2005
Paulson, K.S. (2005). The effect of variation in atmospheric absorption on millimetric, terrestrial, telecommunications links. Radio Science 40: doi: 10.1029/2004RS003218. issn: 0048-6604.

When planning the link budget for millimeter and submillimeter wave telecommunications links, the attenuation by atmospheric gasses is taken into account. However, at millimetric frequencies above 50 GHz it may become necessary to account for the temporal variations in absorption when calculating fade margins. Attenuation due to atmospheric absorption varies with temperature, barometric pressure, and humidity, and the amplitude of variation can become significant compared to rain fade margins. This paper examines the variation in absorption between 10 and 1000 GHz derived from meteorological time series. This variation is compared to the attenuation time series experienced by two experimental, 5-km links operating at 54.5 and 56.5 GHz in the southern United Kingdom. A method is developed to predict the average annual distribution of specific attenuation due to atmospheric absorption, based on easily obtainable meteorological parameters. A further method is developed to integrate this variation into existing models of annual fade distribution, and these results are compared to measured distributions.

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Radio Science, Radio wave propagation, Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Radiation, transmission and scattering, Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Pressure, density, and temperature, radio propagation, absorption, atmospheric gases, terrestrial links, annual statistics
Journal
Radio Science
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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