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Bob Bob wrote in news:7kjom6-m74.ln1
@p400bob.personal.cox.net: Hi Paul Just for interest what is the S/N margin with most commercial satellite systems and how "strong" is the sun relative to those levels? I would assume the margin for an end use TV viewer would be less than this? Bob, it is a few years since I did satellite path designs... but relying on memory... Most satellite TV here is digital, and the issue becomes a C/N ratio that delivers acceptable error rates after FEC. The characteristic has a knee, and error rates degrade rapidly at the knee. Satellite facilities are so expensive, that operation is usually quite close to the knee... save a margin for such things as weather, and that margin is usually no more than necessary for most but not all such variables. You don't need much Sun noise to ruin performance. (BTW, I think that the satellites used for this purpose here are bent pipe technology (aka linear transponder), the uplink is not regenerated on the bird.) The issues discussed in the thread seem to mix up two distinct effects. If the earth station sees the sun behind the satellite, C/N may be degraded sufficiently to disrupt digital services. At equinoxes, the bird rotates into the earth's shaddow and some times of day, and that means it has to operate exclusively on battery, and if it uses the Sun for antenna tracking, it will need to change reference. Using CO2 for a reference (earth's atmosphere) is not reliable if the Moon appears from behind the earth, the antennas could track the moon. I am not up to date on the latest tracking references... but I am sure the Sun is still a good reference, good contrast, visible most of the time. Owen |
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