Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Notation
- 1 Overview of Wireless Communications
- 2 Path Loss and Shadowing
- 3 Statistical Multipath Channel Models
- 4 Capacity of Wireless Channels
- 5 Digital Modulation and Detection
- 6 Performance of Digital Modulation over Wireless Channels
- 7 Diversity
- 8 Coding for Wireless Channels
- 9 Adaptive Modulation and Coding
- 10 Multiple Antennas and Space-Time Communications
- 11 Equalization
- 12 Multicarrier Modulation
- 13 Spread Spectrum
- 14 Multiuser Systems
- 15 Cellular Systems and Infrastructure-Based Wireless Networks
- 16 Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
- Appendix A Representation of Bandpass Signals and Channels
- Appendix B Probability Theory, Random Variables, and Random Processes
- Appendix C Matrix Definitions, Operations, and Properties
- Appendix D Summary of Wireless Standards
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Path Loss and Shadowing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Notation
- 1 Overview of Wireless Communications
- 2 Path Loss and Shadowing
- 3 Statistical Multipath Channel Models
- 4 Capacity of Wireless Channels
- 5 Digital Modulation and Detection
- 6 Performance of Digital Modulation over Wireless Channels
- 7 Diversity
- 8 Coding for Wireless Channels
- 9 Adaptive Modulation and Coding
- 10 Multiple Antennas and Space-Time Communications
- 11 Equalization
- 12 Multicarrier Modulation
- 13 Spread Spectrum
- 14 Multiuser Systems
- 15 Cellular Systems and Infrastructure-Based Wireless Networks
- 16 Ad Hoc Wireless Networks
- Appendix A Representation of Bandpass Signals and Channels
- Appendix B Probability Theory, Random Variables, and Random Processes
- Appendix C Matrix Definitions, Operations, and Properties
- Appendix D Summary of Wireless Standards
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The wireless radio channel poses a severe challenge as a medium for reliable high-speed communication. Not only is it susceptible to noise, interference, and other channel impediments, but these impediments change over time in unpredictable ways as a result of user movement and environment dynamics. In this chapter we characterize the variation in received signal power over distance due to path loss and shadowing. Path loss is caused by dissipation of the power radiated by the transmitter as well as by effects of the propagation channel. Path-loss models generally assume that path loss is the same at a given transmit–receive distance (assuming that the path-loss model does not include shadowing effects). Shadowing is caused by obstacles between the transmitter and receiver that attenuate signal power through absorption, reflection, scattering, and diffraction. When the attenuation is strong, the signal is blocked. Received power variation due to path loss occurs over long distances (100–1000 m), whereas variation due to shadowing occurs over distances that are proportional to the length of the obstructing object (10–100 m in outdoor environments and less in indoor environments). Since variations in received power due to path loss and shadowing occur over relatively large distances, these variations are sometimes referred to as large-scale propagation effects. Chapter 3 will deal with received power variations due to the constructive and destructive addition of multipath signal components.
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- Wireless Communications , pp. 27 - 63Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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