Effects of Rain Attenuation on Satellite EHF (Extremely High Frequency) Communications in the United States

Abstract

One-minute rain rate data over a 10-year period-of-record at each of 41 locations in the contiguous U.S., and for a 6 1/2-year period-of-record at 1 location in Puerto Rico, were extracted from original weighing raingage recordings. The data were analyzed to determine monthly, seasonal, and annual rain-rate frequencies, durations, and probabilities at locations representing a large variety of climatic rainfall regimes. These analyses are particularly useful for estimating EHF (Extremely High Frequency) communication outages due to the increasing effects of attenuation caused by rain at frequencies above 10 GHz. An attenuation model was used to estimate the effects of rain attenuation at all 42 locations. Analyses of the 1-min rain rates, and outage estimates for various frequencies and propagation-path elevation angles are presented.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 09, 1989
Accession Number
ADA210517

Entities

People

  • Kevin P. Larson
  • Paul Tattelman

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • 5G Wireless Networks
  • Artificial Satellites
  • Atmospheric Sciences
  • Attenuation
  • Cape Hatteras
  • Classification
  • Data Analysis
  • Elevation
  • Extremely High Frequency
  • Frequency
  • Plastic Explosives
  • Precipitation
  • Radio Frequency
  • Rain
  • Rain Gages
  • Rainfall
  • United States

Readers

  • Atmospheric Remote Sensing.
  • Regression Analysis.
  • Tactical Satellite Communications Systems Engineering.

Technology Areas

  • Space