Link Budget & Parameter Reference Guide
To design a satellite network or successfully coordinate frequencies with neighboring systems, you must understand the mathematical and physical parameters that govern a radio link. This chapter serves as a reference manual for both beginners and experienced engineers.
Each parameter is broken down into two sections:
- The Sound Analogy: A simple, intuitive explanation mapping radio frequency physics to human speech, ears, and acoustic environments.
- The Engineering Blueprint: The formal mathematical formulas, units, typical operational values (including 2 GHz S-band, 8 GHz X-band, C, Ku, and Ka bands), and troubleshooting rules to spot calculation errors.
The Field Analogy: How a Link Budget Works
Before diving into the detailed mathematical parameter definitions, it helps to understand a satellite link budget as a simple, intuitive conversation between two people standing on opposite sides of a large, grassy field.
Lungs (Tx Power)
|
Megaphone (Tx Gain) ===> [EIRP]
|
V
Speaker (Alice) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > Listener (Bob)
Spreading Loss (FSPL) |
V
Listening Cone (Rx Gain)
|
Wind/Shouting (Noise)
|
Can Bob hear Alice? (C/N)
To determine whether the listener (Bob) can hear and understand the speaker (Alice), we perform a link budget calculation (adding up all the gains and subtracting all the losses):
- Alice's Lung Capacity (Transmitter Power): This is the raw acoustic energy Alice generates in her throat. If she whispers, she has low power. If she screams, she has high power.
- Alice's Megaphone (Transmit Gain): If Alice shouts in all directions, her voice spreads out and grows quiet quickly. If she speaks through a megaphone, she focuses her voice into a narrow beam, making her sound much louder to anyone directly in front of her.
- The Combined Shout (EIRP): The megaphone doesn't create new sound, but by combining Alice's lung power with the megaphone's focusing gain, we get her Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (EIRP)—which is how loud her voice seems to Bob.
- Traveling Across the Field (Spreading Loss / FSPL): As Alice's shout travels across the distance of the field, the sound waves spread out in a large sphere. The larger the sphere becomes, the less sound energy enters any single square inch of Bob's location. This is Free Space Path Loss.
- Bob's Listening Cone (Receive Gain): When the faint sound waves arrive at Bob, he can cup his hand behind his ear or hold up a listening cone to capture more of the sound waves coming from Alice's direction, amplifying the voice.
- The Field Environment (Noise): The field is not silent. There is wind rustling the leaves, birds chirping, and perhaps other groups of people shouting. If there are too many people shouting on the field, the background hum increases, making it very noisy and difficult to hear.
- Can Bob Understand Alice? (Carrier-to-Noise Ratio / C/N): Ultimately, Bob's ability to decode Alice's words depends on the ratio between Alice's voice (the Carrier) entering his ear and the background field hum (the Noise). If the voice is louder than the hum (a positive C/N), Bob understands Alice. If the noise is too loud (a negative C/N), Alice's voice is drowned out and Bob hears only static.
In satellite engineering, we use exactly this math: we start with transmitter power, add antenna gains, subtract path and atmospheric losses, factor in the receiver's noise level, and verify if the resulting signal-to-noise ratio is high enough to lock the communications link.
1. Transmitter Power (P_tx)
The Sound Analogy
Think of transmitter power as the strength of your lungs and vocal cords. If you whisper, you are using very low power. If you shout at the top of your lungs, you are using high power. The harder you blow air through your vocal cords, the more acoustic energy you generate at the source.
The Engineering Blueprint
Transmitter power is the raw radio frequency (RF) power generated by the satellite's High Power Amplifier (HPA) or the Earth station's solid-state power amplifier (SSPA), measured before the antenna.
- Units: Watts () or Decibels relative to 1 Watt ().
- Formulas:
- Typical Values:
- 2 GHz S-band (TTC): to ( to ) for small satellites.
- 8 GHz X-band (Payload): to ( to ).
- Ku-band Satellite Transponder: to ( to ).
- Ka-band Earth Station (VSAT): to ( to ).
- Ka-band Gateway Earth Station: to ( to ).
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: Negative power in Watts () is physically impossible.
- Red Flag: A value in that is positive does not mean "amplified" over the source, but rather relative to (e.g., ). If your output power is larger than the electrical power input to the amplifier, you have violated conservation of energy.
2. Antenna Peak Gain (G)
The Sound Analogy
Antenna gain is like shouting through a megaphone (for transmitting) or cupping your hand behind your ear (for receiving). A megaphone does not create new sound energy; it simply takes the sound from your mouth and squeezes it in one narrow direction. If you stand in front of the megaphone, it sounds much louder (high gain). If you stand behind it, you can barely hear it (low gain).
Omnidirectional (No megaphone) ──> Sound spreads in all directions
Directive (Megaphone) ──> Sound focused in a narrow cone
The Engineering Blueprint
Antenna gain measures the antenna's ability to direct RF energy in a specific direction relative to an isotropic radiator (an imaginary antenna that radiates energy equally in all directions).
- Units: Decibels isotropic () or dimensionless ratio.
- Formula:
Where is aperture efficiency ( to ), is the dish diameter (meters), and is wavelength (meters).
- In decibels:
- Typical Values:
- 2 GHz S-band: to (often patch or helical antennas on satellites).
- 8 GHz X-band (Satellite): to (horn or small steerable dishes).
- Ku-band VSAT Dish (1.2m): .
- Ka-band Gateway Dish (6.3m): .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: Passive antennas cannot generate energy. If an antenna gain is listed as , the output signal in the boresight direction will be times stronger than an isotropic antenna, but the beamwidth must be extremely narrow. If gain is high and beamwidth is wide, the calculation is incorrect.
3. Carrier Frequency (f) & Wavelength (λ)
The Sound Analogy
Frequency is the pitch or tone of the sound.
- Low frequency is like a deep bass drum. The sound travels easily through walls, around corners, and over long distances, but you cannot use it to play a rapid, intricate violin solo (low data capacity).
- High frequency is like a squeaky dog whistle. It carries detailed, high-speed sound patterns, but is easily blocked by a door, a hand, or even rain falling in the air.
The Engineering Blueprint
Frequency is the number of electromagnetic wave cycles per second, and wavelength is the physical distance between wave peaks.
- Units: Hertz (, typically for satcom) and meters ( or ).
- Formula:
Where (speed of light).
- Typical Values:
- S-band (TTC): ().
- X-band (Downlink): ().
- C-band: to ( to ).
- Ku-band: to ( to ).
- Ka-band: to ( to ).
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: The product of frequency and wavelength must always equal the speed of light (). If your Ka-band frequency () does not equal a wavelength, check your unit conversions.
4. Elevation Angle (θ)
The Sound Analogy
Elevation is the tilt angle of your head looking up at the speaker.
- Zenith (90°): If the speaker is directly above you, you look straight up. This is the shortest, cleanest path. The sound travels through the minimum amount of air and dust.
- Horizon (near 0°): If the speaker is far away near the floor, you look almost flat. The sound has to travel through a long, crowded, dusty corridor of air close to the ground, scattering the voice.
The Engineering Blueprint
Elevation is the angle between the ground station's line-of-sight vector to the satellite and the local horizontal plane.
- Units: Degrees (°).
- Impact on Slant Range:
- Earth's atmosphere is a thin protective blanket (around to of dense troposphere/stratosphere).
- When the elevation angle is high (), the RF beam passes straight through this layer, traversing only the minimum thickness.
- When the elevation angle is low (e.g., ), the beam passes diagonally through the atmosphere, travelling a much longer distance through air, clouds, and rain. This atmospheric path length (or "air mass") is roughly proportional to for elevations above .
- Consequently, low elevation angles dramatically increase both the physical distance (slant range) and the environmental absorption losses.
- Typical Values:
- Minimum operational elevation for GEO: to (to avoid ground noise and buildings).
- Tracking limits for LEO: to .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: An elevation angle less than means the satellite is physically blocked by the Earth (below the horizon) and cannot be reached.
5. Azimuth Angle (ϕ) & Coordinate Conversions
The Sound Analogy
Azimuth is the horizontal compass direction you must face to hear the speaker. If the speaker is to your right, you turn your body East. If they are behind you, you turn South. It represents the left-to-right alignment of your head compass.
The Engineering Blueprint
Azimuth is the pointing angle measured clockwise from true North.
- Units: Degrees (°).
Ground Station to Satellite Look Angle Coordinate Conversion
To compute the local look angles (Azimuth and Elevation ) from an Earth station located at Latitude and Longitude targeting a geostationary (GEO) satellite parked on the equator at Longitude :
- Calculate Longitude Difference ():
- Calculate Central Angle ():
- Calculate Elevation Angle ():
Where (Earth equatorial radius) and (Geostationary orbit radius). 4. Calculate Intermediate Angle ():
- Calculate Final Azimuth () based on Earth station location:
- Northern Hemisphere ():
- If satellite is East of Earth Station ():
- Northern Hemisphere ():
- If satellite is West of Earth Station ():
- Southern Hemisphere ():
- If satellite is East of Earth Station ():
- If satellite is West of Earth Station ():
Satellite to Ground Station Pointing Coordinate Conversion
To convert this pointing angle back into the satellite's reference frame (the roll/pitch boresight angles required for the satellite's antenna to align with the Earth station):
- Calculate the off-nadir angle ():
- Using the law of sines:
Where is the calculated slant range and is the ground elevation angle. 2. Calculate the satellite-centered azimuth angle ():
- Due to geometry symmetry, the satellite's look direction is rotated relative to the Earth station's local horizontal direction.
Satellite (Center)
| \ Look Angle (η)
| \
| \ Slant Range (d)
| \
| \
Earth ----- Earth Station (Elevation El)
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: An elevation angle less than means the satellite is physically blocked by the Earth (below the horizon) and cannot be reached. If a calculated azimuth is outside the range , or if the look angle exceeds the Earth's horizon limit ( for GEO), check your trigonometric functions.
6. Distance / Slant Range (d)
The Sound Analogy
Distance is the total separation between the speaker and the listener. The further away you stand, the quieter the voice becomes because the sound waves spread out over a larger volume.
The Engineering Blueprint
Slant range is the actual line-of-sight distance between the satellite in orbit and the ground station on Earth, taking Earth's curvature into account.
- Units: Kilometers () or meters ().
- Formula (Geocentric elevation model):
Where (Earth radius), (orbit radius), is altitude (), and is the local elevation angle.
- Geocentric Relationship:
- Slant range is at its absolute minimum when the elevation is (equal to the satellite's altitude ).
- Slant range increases to its maximum when the elevation is (at the horizon).
- Typical Values:
- LEO Satellites (Zenith/90° Elevation): to .
- LEO Satellites (Horizon/5° Elevation): to .
- GEO Satellites (Zenith/90° Elevation): .
- GEO Satellites (Low Elevation): Up to .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: Slant range can never be less than the satellite's altitude. If a satellite is at altitude and your slant range calculates to , check your geocentric coordinates.
7. Free Space Path Loss (FSPL)
The Sound Analogy
As sound leaves your mouth, it expands in an ever-growing sphere. The total energy remains the same, but it spreads thinner and thinner as the sphere grows. By the time the sound reaches a listener far away, only a tiny fraction of the original shout enters their ear. FSPL is the spreading loss of this sphere over distance.
Source (Point) ──> Small Sphere (Loud) ──> Large Sphere (Quiet)
The Engineering Blueprint
FSPL is the attenuation of RF energy caused solely by the spherical spreading of the wave front over distance, assuming no obstacles or atmosphere.
- Units: Decibels ().
- Formula:
In decibels (with in and in ):
- Typical Values:
- 2 GHz S-band LEO (1,000 km): .
- 8 GHz X-band LEO (1,000 km): .
- Ku-band GEO (38,000 km): .
- Ka-band GEO (38,000 km): .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: FSPL is always a positive attenuation value in (subtracted in the link budget). If your FSPL is negative, or if it decreases as distance or frequency increases, the formula has been inverted.
8. Environmental & Atmospheric Losses (L_env)
The Sound Analogy
This is like trying to shout through a thick blanket, a dense patch of trees, or a heavy rainstorm. Even if the listener is close, the air, leaves, or water droplets absorb and scatter the sound energy, turning it into heat and making it much harder to hear. Low pitches (bass) go right through the blanket, but high pitches (screeches) are completely absorbed.
The Engineering Blueprint
Environmental losses include absorption by atmospheric gases (oxygen and water vapor), rain attenuation, cloud attenuation, tropospheric scintillation, and polarization misalignment.
- Units: Decibels ().
- Calculation: Guided by ITU-R Recommendations:
- Atmospheric Gases: ITU-R P.676
- Rain Attenuation: ITU-R P.838 & P.618
- Typical Values:
- S-band / X-band: Atmospheric and rain losses are very small (less than for S-band, less than for X-band).
- Ku-band Rain Loss: to depending on rain rate (major impact).
- Ka-band Rain Loss: to (severe fade, requires power control).
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: If your rain attenuation at S-band () calculates to , or if Ka-band rain attenuation is modeled as during a heavy tropical storm, the model is wrong. High frequencies are always attenuated exponentially more than low frequencies by rain.
9. Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (EIRP)
The Sound Analogy
EIRP is the effective loudness of your megaphone in the direction you are pointing it. It combines your lung power (transmitter power) and the focus of the megaphone (antenna gain) minus any losses in the throat of the megaphone (feed losses). It represents how loud you seem to be shouting to someone directly in front of the megaphone.
Lung Power (10W) + Megaphone (x100 Focus) = EIRP (1000W equivalent)
The Engineering Blueprint
EIRP is the total effective power radiated by the transmitter-antenna system, calculated in the direction of maximum gain.
- Units: Decibels relative to 1 Watt () or Watts ().
- Formula:
- Typical Values:
- 2 GHz S-band LEO Satellite: to .
- 8 GHz X-band LEO Satellite: to .
- Ku-band GEO Transponder: to .
- Ka-band Gateway Earth Station: to .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: If your EIRP is less than your transmitter power (and you have positive antenna gain), you have subtracted the gain instead of adding it. EIRP should almost always be significantly higher than raw transmitter power for directional satellite links.
10. Power Flux Density (PFD)
The Sound Analogy
PFD is the sound pressure hitting a specific square meter of the listener's head. If you stand close to a megaphone, the sound pressure is high. If you stand far away, the sound has spread out over a huge area, so the pressure hitting a single square meter is tiny. PFD measures how concentrated the energy is when it arrives at a specific location, normalized to a given area.
The Engineering Blueprint
PFD is the amount of radio frequency power flowing through a unit area perpendicular to the direction of propagation at a given distance. It is used by the ITU to enforce power limits to protect terrestrial networks.
- Units: Decibels relative to 1 Watt per square meter (), often normalized to a reference bandwidth (e.g., per or ).
- Formula:
In decibels (with in meters):
Simplified:
- Typical Values:
- Ku-band GEO Downlink at Earth: to (unfiltered).
- ITU Article 21 Limits (Ku-band, low elevation): in a bandwidth.
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: Because a square meter is very large compared to the power of a signal traveling tens of thousands of kilometers, PFD values are almost always highly negative numbers (e.g., ). A positive PFD value (like ) at the Earth's surface would represent a microwave beam capable of cooking organic tissue.
11. Bandwidth (B) & Reference Bandwidth (B_ref)
The Sound Analogy
- Bandwidth: Think of bandwidth as the width of the highway or the range of vocal pitches you use to communicate. A narrow bandwidth is like whispering in a single, monotone whistle pitch. A wide bandwidth is like using a full orchestral frequency range (bass to treble) to transmit a huge volume of notes simultaneously.
- Reference Bandwidth: This is like checking how much noise or sound energy is in a standard slice of that range (e.g., measuring just a 1-meter slice of the highway). Regulators use this standard slice to make sure nobody is shouting too loudly in any single frequency zone, even if they have a wide channel.
The Engineering Blueprint
- Bandwidth (B): The width of the frequency band (in Hertz) occupied by the modulated carrier.
- Reference Bandwidth (B_ref): The standard bandwidth slice defined by regulators (such as the ITU) to normalize power measurements for interference verification. Typical reference slices are (for bands below ) and (for bands above ).
- Power Normalization Formula:
- To find the PFD in the reference bandwidth (for limits compliance):
- Typical Values:
- S-band TTC: .
- X-band Payload: to .
- Ka-band Gateway Link: to .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: Bandwidth must always be positive. If is larger than the actual carrier bandwidth , the normalized power in the reference bandwidth is simply equal to the total power (i.e. no negative adjustment factor is applied).
12. System Noise Temperature (T_sys) & Noise Figure (NF)
The Sound Analogy
Imagine trying to listen to a speaker in a room:
- Ambient Noise: People chatting around you, the air conditioning hum, and traffic outside. This is like antenna noise temperature.
- Internal Noise: A ringing in your own ears, or the sound of blood rushing through your head. Even if the room is perfectly silent, your own body's hearing system generates internal static. This is the Noise Figure of the receiver's amplifier.
- System Noise Temperature (T_sys): The combined effect of both the noisy room and your noisy ears. The noisier the environment and the worse your hearing, the harder it is to make out words.
Ambient Room Hum (Antenna Temp) + Ear Static (LNB Noise Temp) = Total Brain Static (Tsys)
The Engineering Blueprint
System noise temperature is the equivalent temperature of a passive resistor that would generate the same thermal noise power as the receiver system (antenna + waveguide + low noise amplifier).
- Units: Kelvin () or Decibels relative to 1 Kelvin (). Noise Figure is measured in Decibels ().
- Formulas:
- Converting Noise Figure () to Noise Temperature () of the Low Noise Amplifier (LNA):
Where (standard reference temperature).
- Total System Noise Temperature:
- Typical Values:
- Ka-band Satellite Receiver (Looking at Earth): to (the Earth is warm, generating noise).
- Ku-band Ground Station LNB: to (pointing at cold space, which is only ).
- Noise Figure (LNB): to .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: Absolute zero is . If your system noise temperature calculates to or a negative Kelvin value, your equations are broken. A noise figure of (perfect noise-free amplifier) is physically impossible at room temperature.
13. Receiver Figure of Merit (G/T)
The Sound Analogy
G/T is the overall quality of the listener's hearing system. It divides the size of their ear-trumpet (antenna gain G) by the static inside their head (system noise temperature T).
- If you have a massive ear-trumpet (high G) but your ears are ringing loudly (high T), you won't hear well.
- If you have normal ears but no ringing (low T), you can hear small sounds clearly. To get a high G/T, you need a large megaphone and a quiet receiver.
The Engineering Blueprint
G/T measures the sensitivity of a receiver system, indicating how well it can extract weak signals from background thermal noise.
- Units: Decibels per Kelvin ().
- Formula:
- Typical Values:
- 2 GHz S-band Satellite: to .
- Ku-band VSAT (1.2m): to .
- Ka-band Gateway (6.3m): to .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: If your G/T is larger than your antenna gain, check your math. Because is subtracted, and is almost always larger than (meaning ), your G/T value must be significantly lower than the raw receiver antenna gain.
14. Carrier-to-Noise Ratio (C/N and C/N0)
The Sound Analogy
C/N is how loudly you hear the speaker's voice compared to the background hum of the room.
- C (Carrier): The loudness of the speaker's voice arriving at your ear (the desired signal).
- N (Noise): The background room chatter, air conditioning hum, and ear static (the undesired noise).
- C/N: The relative level. If the voice (C) is louder than the hum (N), C/N is high and positive. If the hum is louder, C/N is low or negative.
- If the speaker is shouting and the room is quiet, the voice is clear (high C/N).
- If the speaker is whispering or the room is crowded, the voice is drowned out (low C/N). is the ratio normalized to a wide slice of the sound spectrum.
The Engineering Blueprint
C/N is the ratio of received carrier power to the total noise power within the signal bandwidth. is the carrier power to noise power spectral density ratio (independent of bandwidth).
- Units: C/N is in Decibels (); is in Decibels-Hertz ().
- Formulas:
Where (Boltzmann constant in dB).
Where is the channel bandwidth ().
Sanity Check: Spread Spectrum Exceptions
- Standard Carriers: Under standard satellite modulation (like QPSK or 8PSK), the demodulator requires a positive C/N (typically to ) to lock onto the carrier and decode. A negative C/N is a failure check.
- Spread Spectrum (CDMA / GPS): In spread spectrum links, the signal is deliberately spread across a massive bandwidth, scattering the power so thinly that the carrier drops far below the thermal noise level. The receiver uses a code correlation process (spreading gain) to reassemble the signal. For these systems, a highly negative raw C/N (e.g., to ) at the receiver input is expected and completely normal.
- Troubleshooting Rule: Verify if the link is a "standard narrow carrier" or "spread spectrum" before flagging a negative C/N as a bug.
- Typical Values:
- C/N0 (Link Lock): to .
- C/N (Demodulator input): to .
- Spread Spectrum: to .
- Red Flag: If is less than or C/N is negative (under typical operations), the receiver will not be able to acquire carrier lock. If your C/N is , you have likely forgotten to subtract the bandwidth () or have added Boltzmann's constant instead of subtracting it.
15. Energy per Bit to Noise Density (Eb/N0) & Link Margin
The Sound Analogy
Imagine the speaker is trying to read out a sequence of code words to you:
- Data Rate: If they speak very slowly (low bitrate), they can put a lot of lung energy into each individual syllable (), making it easy to understand. If they speak at high speed (high bitrate), each syllable is extremely short and has very little energy, making it easy to mishear.
- Required Eb/N0: The minimum energy per syllable you need to write down the message without mistakes.
- Link Margin: The "safety buffer." If you need a volume of 5 to understand the speaker, and they are shouting at a volume of 8, you have a margin. If they drop to a volume of 4, the margin is negative (), and you will start missing words.
The Engineering Blueprint
Eb/N0 is the normalized signal-to-noise ratio measure for digital communications. Link margin is the excess signal power above the threshold required to maintain a target Bit Error Rate (BER).
- Units: Decibels ().
- Formulas:
Where is the bit rate in bits per second ().
- Typical Values:
- Required Eb/N0: to depending on modulation (QPSK/16QAM) and Forward Error Correction (FEC) rate.
- Acceptable Link Margin: to (safety buffer for rain/pointing losses).
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: If your bitrate increases, your Eb/N0 must decrease for the same received power (C/N0). If your link margin is negative, your communications channel will drop packets and fail to lock.
16. Antenna Beamwidth (HPBW & FNBW)
The Sound Analogy
Beamwidth is the angle or spread of the megaphone's cone of sound.
- Narrow Beamwidth: A highly directional megaphone that shoots sound in a tight beam (e.g., wide). It sounds extremely loud inside the beam, but if the speaker turns their head slightly away from you, you instantly hear nothing.
- Wide Beamwidth: A wide megaphone (e.g., wide) that distributes sound across the whole room. It is much quieter, but you can move around freely without losing the signal.
HPBW (Half Power Beamwidth) ──> The angle where sound volume drops by half (-3 dB)
FNBW (First Null Beamwidth) ──> The angle where sound volume drops to absolute zero
The Engineering Blueprint
HPBW is the angular width of the main beam lobe where the radiation intensity drops to half of its peak value (). FNBW is the angular span between the first nulls (zeros) in the radiation pattern.
- Units: Degrees (°) or Radians.
- Formulas (for parabolic reflector antenna):
- Typical Values:
- 2 GHz S-band Patch: to .
- 8 GHz X-band Satellite Dish (0.3m): .
- Ku-band VSAT Dish (1.2m): .
- Ka-band Gateway Dish (6.3m): .
- Sanity Checks:
- Red Flag: HPBW can never be greater than . For directional reflector dishes, if your calculated HPBW is greater than , check your frequency/wavelength unit conversions. FNBW should always be approximately double the HPBW.
17. Shannon-Hartley Channel Capacity (Shannon Limit)
The Sound Analogy
The Shannon Limit is the absolute speed-limit of the room's acoustics. No matter how complex your language is, physics dictates that you cannot transmit data faster than this limit without making errors.
- Shouting louder (increasing C/N) helps, up to a point, by making the voice distinct from the noise.
- Building a wider room (increasing bandwidth): If you double the room's width, you can split your speech into two slower, simpler whispers running in parallel at different frequencies. Because each whisper runs slowly, it is much easier to hear through the noise.
The Engineering Blueprint
The Shannon-Hartley theorem calculates the maximum theoretical error-free information transmission rate (channel capacity C) over a communications channel with a given bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio.
- Units: Bits per second ( or ).
- Formula:
Where is the bandwidth in Hertz () and is the linear signal-to-noise power ratio:
Theoretical vs. Practical Limits
-
Theoretical Maximum: The Shannon limit represents a mathematical upper bound assuming infinite decoder complexity, infinite code block lengths, and infinite processing delay. In practice, achieving 100% Shannon capacity is impossible.
-
Practical Coding Limit (Derating): Modern high-performance communications systems use advanced Forward Error Correction (FEC) codes like Low-Density Parity-Check (LDPC) and Turbo codes. These state-of-the-art codes typically operate 1 to 2 dB away from the Shannon limit (which translates to achieving roughly 70% to 85% of the theoretical channel capacity).
-
Sanity Check Rule:
- Calculate the spectral efficiency
- Verify that it satisfies:
- Red Flag: If your link budget proposes a spectral efficiency of (e.g., 64APSK) with a C/N of only (), the capacity limit is . Since , the link is physically impossible and will completely fail to decode.
Next Steps
- Next Topic: Space Debris Mitigation & Post-Mission Disposal - Learn about space safety guidelines and the 5-year de-orbiting rule.
- Related Concepts:
- Bilateral and Multilateral Spectrum Coordination - Learn how coordinating teams use these parameters to negotiate coexistence metrics like I/N.
- Satellite Engineering Toolkit - Test these parameters interactively using the PFD, Look Angle, Link Budget, and Antenna calculators.
Further Reading
- Satellite Communications Systems by Gerard Maral & Michel Bousquet - Detailed derivations of the geocentric coordinate conversions and slant ranges.
- ITU-R Recommendation P.618 - Access official ITU propagation models for slant path design.