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Report Style: Link Budget - Interference
This Access report is a subset of the link budget report, showing key link budget parameters as in the Link Budget report style: EIRP, Frequency, RIP, Flux Density, g/T, C/No, Bandwidth, C/N, Eb/No, and BER. It also reports key link performance parameters under the presence of interfering signals, such as C/(No+Io), C/(N+I), C/I, Eb/(No+Io), and BER+I. Please refer to the link budget detailed report style for details.Data Provider:Link Information
Type: Time-varying data.
Availability: Reports | Dynamic Displays
Column Listing
Column | Column Name | Element | Type | Dimension | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Time | Time | Real Number or Text | Date | Time. |
2 | Xmtr Power | Xmtr Power | Real Number | Power | The RF power output of the transmitter as measured at the input to the antenna. This is a user selectable value. |
3 | Xmtr Gain | Xmtr Gain | Real Number | Ratio | The antenna gain of the transmitter which is dependent on the antenna type selected. For transmitter models that do not have an antenna model, this is a user defined value. For the simple source transmitter, 0 dB is reported since the simple source transmitter is modeled as an isotropic radiator. When using a Multibeam Transmitter with the Beam Selection Strategy set to Aggregate Active Beams, the Xmtr Gain element represents an effective (not aggregate) gain that weighs the contribution of each beam in the link direction according to its transmitted power. |
4 | EIRP | EIRP | Real Number | Power | The effective isotropic radiated power in the link direction. This value is the product of the transmitter power and the transmitter gain in the link direction with the inclusion of user defined post transmit gains and losses. |
5 | Free Space Loss | Free Space Loss | Real Number | Ratio | Loss due to propagation through free space. |
6 | Atmos Loss | Atmos Loss | Real Number | Ratio | Loss calculated by the selected atmosphere model. |
7 | Rain Loss | Rain Loss | Real Number | Ratio | Loss calculated by the selected rain model. |
8 | CloudsFog Loss | CloudsFog Loss | Real Number | Ratio | Loss calculated by the Clouds and Fog model. |
9 | TropoScintill Loss | TropoScintill Loss | Real Number | Ratio | Loss calculated by the troposphere Scintillation model. |
10 | Prop Loss | Prop Loss | Real Number | Ratio | The total propagation loss computed across all enabled propagation models. |
11 | Freq. Doppler Shift | Freq. Doppler Shift | Real Number | Frequency | The frequency Doppler shift is the offset in frequency between the transmitted frequency and the received frequency. This value is zero for auto tracked receivers. |
12 | Rcvd. Frequency | Rcvd. Frequency | Real Number | Frequency | The received frequency is the frequency that the receiver is tuned to in order to communicate with the transmitter. This frequency may be auto-tracked or entered by the user in the receiver properties. |
13 | Rcvd. Iso. Power | Rcvd. Iso. Power | Real Number | Power | Received isotropic power is the power at the receiver before the pre-receive gains/losses and the receiver antenna gain added (in dBW). It is equal to the EIRP with all the channel losses as well as the bandwidth overlap applied. |
14 | Flux Density | Flux Density | Real Number | PowerFluxDensity | The power from the desired transmitter crossing a unit area normal to the direction of wave propagation. |
15 | Rcvr Gain | Rcvr Gain | Real Number | Ratio | Receiver Gain is the antenna gain (in dBi) of the receiver which is dependent on the antenna type used. |
16 | Tatmos | Tatmos | Real Number | Temperature | Tatmos is the antenna noise temperature component attributed to the gaseous absorption model. |
17 | Train | Train | Real Number | Temperature | Train is the antenna noise temperature component attributed to the rain model. |
18 | TcloudsFog | TcloudsFog | Real Number | Temperature | The noise temperature from the Cloud and Fog model. |
19 | TtropoScintill | TtropoScintill | Real Number | Temperature | The noise temperature from the Troposhperic Scintillation model. |
20 | Tsun | Tsun | Real Number | Temperature | Tsun is the antenna noise temperature component attributed to the sun. |
21 | Tearth | Tearth | Real Number | Temperature | Tearth is the antenna noise temperature component attributed to the earth. This is applicable only to receivers not on the ground. |
22 | Tcosmic | Tcosmic | Real Number | Temperature | Tcosmic is the antenna noise temperature component attributed to the cosmic background. This is applicable only to receivers not on the ground. |
23 | Tantenna | Tantenna | Real Number | Temperature | Tantenna is the antenna noise temperature which is the sum of all the noise source components. |
24 | Tequivalent | Tequivalent | Real Number | Temperature | The equivalent system temperature is specified by the user as a constant value or computed at each time step from the receiver system temperature parameters defined by the user. |
25 | g/T | g/T | Real Number | GainTempRatio | G/T = (Receiver Gain)/(System Temperature at the Receiver). The ratio of the receive antenna gain G to the total system temperature T is the "figure of merit" for the receiver (in dB/K). The figure of merit is independent of the point where it is calculated. However, the gain and system temperature must be specified at the same point. |
26 | C/No | C/No | Real Number | SpectralDensity | The carrier to noise density ratio (C/No) where C is the carrier power and No = kT (Boltzmann's constant x system temperature) is the noise density. It is equivalent to C/N with a normalized Bandwidth (B=1). |
27 | C/(No+Io) | C/(No+Io) | Real Number | SpectralDensity | The carrier to noise-plus-interference density ratio (C/(No+Io)), where C is the carrier power, No = kT (Boltzmann's constant * system temperature), and Io = interference power spectral density. |
28 | Bandwidth | Bandwidth | Real Number | Bandwidth | Bandwidth is the Receiver Bandwidth. |
29 | Bandwidth Overlap | Bandwidth Overlap | Real Number | Ratio | The bandwidth overlap factor is the fraction (between 0 and 1) of transmitted power which is contained within the receiver's bandwidth. The amount of power received by the receiver is equal to the transmitted EIRP multiplied by the bandwidth overlap factor and taking into account any propagation losses. |
30 | C/N | C/N | Real Number | Ratio | The carrier to noise ratio (C/N) where C is the carrier power and N = kTB (Boltzmann's constant x system temperature x bandwidth) is the noise power. |
31 | C/(N+I) | C/(N+I) | Real Number | Ratio | The carrier to noise-plus-interference ratio (C/(N+I)), where C is the carrier power, N = kTB (Boltzmann's constant * system temperature * bandwidth), and I = interference power. |
32 | C/I | C/I | Real Number | Ratio | C/I is the carrier power from the desired signal over the sum of all interferer powers. |
33 | Eb/No | Eb/No | Real Number | Ratio | The energy per bit to noise ratio (Eb/No) where Eb is the energy per bit and No = kT (Boltzmann's constant * system temperature). |
34 | Eb/(No+Io) | Eb/(No+Io) | Real Number | Ratio | The energy per bit to noise-plus-interference ratio (Eb/(No+Io)), where Eb is the energy per bit, No = kT (Boltzmann's constant * system temperature), and Io = interference power spectral density. |
35 | BER | BER | Real Number | Unitless | Bit Error Rate (BER) is the probability that a bit is in error (i.e. a zero is transmitted but a one is received). The BER is the number of bits in error divided by the total number of bits sent. STK uses table lookup from a .mod file to extract a BER given an Eb/No. STK interpolates the table as necessary to determine the appropriate bit error rate for a particular bit energy level. If the bit energy is smaller than the first value in the table, the bit error rate for the first value is used. If the bit energy is larger than the last value in the table, a default bit error rate of 1.0e-30 is used to indicate no errors. |
36 | BER+I | BER+I | Real Number | Unitless | Bit error rate in the presence of interference (BER+I) is the probability that a bit is in error (i.e. a zero is transmitted but a one is received) in the interference environment. The BER+I is the number of bits in error divided by the total number of bits sent. STK uses table lookup from a .mod file to extract a BER+I given an Eb/(No+Io). STK interpolates the table as necessary to determine the appropriate bit error rate for a particular bit energy level. If the bit energy is smaller than the first value in the table, the bit error rate for the first value is used. If the bit energy is larger than the last value in the table, a default bit error rate of 1.0e-30 is used to indicate no errors. |