Problem 45806. SatCom #8: Satellite Link Budget
Satellite and Space Engineering - Problem #8
This is part of a series of problems looking at topics in satellite and space communications and systems engineering.
lf you have competed the previous exercises in this series, you will have more-or-less everything that you need to complete this problem.
Knowing the parameters of a radio transmitter and receiver, determine the wanted signal power (dBW) in the radio receiver (in this case we are thinking of a satellite receiver, but the approach is generic to all radio receivers).
You are given power (dBW) of the signal applied to the transmitting dish antenna, the diameters (m) and efficiencies (%) of the transmitting and receiving dishes, the path length (km) between the transmitting and receiving antennas, and the frequency of the transmitted signal (GHz).
Hint: See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link_budget#Equation - For this simplified exercise, you should ignore transmitter, receiver and miscelaneous losses.
Example: For a Ka-Band GSO space-to-Earth link at 17.7 GHz and of path length 41,130.13 km, where the satellite antenna has an input RF power of 9.5 dBW, a diameter of 75cm and an efficiency of 70%, and the signal is received on an Earth-station antenna of diameter 65cm and efficiency 65%, the RF power in the satellite receiver is around -119.1 dBW.
Some future problems in this series will build on work done in previous problems, so if you get a working solution I suggest you hang onto the code!
Solution Stats
Problem Comments
-
1 Comment
Augusto Mazzei
on 26 Feb 2022
actually the wikipedia page is referring for the TX and RX antennas a power expressed in dBm, not dBW. Can you make some check?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decibel_watt
Solution Comments
Show commentsProblem Recent Solvers31
Suggested Problems
-
Back to basics 9 - Indexed References
441 Solvers
-
Return unique values without sorting
925 Solvers
-
290 Solvers
-
find the roots of a quadratic equation
226 Solvers
-
Create a two dimensional zero matrix
489 Solvers
More from this Author17
Problem Tags
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!