Comparative Assessment and Performance Analysis of Interference Mitigation Techniques for Co-Existent Non-Geostationary and Geostationary Satellites

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Department of Electrical & Electronics Engineering
Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering (EE) offers solid graduate education and research program. Our Department is known for its student-centered and practice-oriented education. We are devoted to provide an exceptional educational experience to our students and prepare them for the highest personal and professional accomplishments. The advanced teaching and research laboratories are designed to educate the future workforce and meet the challenges of current technologies. The faculty's research activities are high voltage, electrical machinery, power systems, signal and image processing and photonics. Our students have exciting opportunities to participate in our department's research projects as well as in various activities sponsored by TUBİTAK, and other professional societies. European Remote Radio Laboratory project, which provides internet-access to our laboratories, has been accomplished under the leadership of our department with contributions from several European institutions.

Journal Issue

Events

Abstract

In recent years, technological developments with user demands, reduced production, and launch costs have rapidly increased the number of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites in space. Since LEO satellites use the same frequency band as existing Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) satellites, the interference coordination between the two satellite networks is vital. In order to minimize the co-existent interference between these satellite networks, studies perform on different interference mitigation strategies. In this paper, analysis and comparative assessment of these interference mitigation techniques are presented for the co-existent Non-Geostationary Earth (NGEO) and GEO systems. More specifically, power control (PC) and spatial isolation-based link adaptation (SILA) techniques are studied comparatively for the performance evaluation. It is shown that the communication link bandwidth is more efficiently utilized in the SILA technique when compared with the PC technique. Moreover, the multi-objective optimization problem (MOP) approach in the SILA technique is demonstrated to be more effective when compared with the single-objective optimization problem (SOP) approach used in the PC technique as the simultaneous prioritizing objective functions outperforms single prioritization. Finally, it is shown that when the PC technique is applied together with the SILA technique, the exclusive angle (EA) can be reduced up to 8% for 100 Mbps, and 8.5% for 200 Mbps transmission bit rates in different operational scenarios. The presented performance evaluation in this paper may help the satellite operator or decision-maker gain insights on which mitigation technique can be used in the case of a co-existent interference. This paper proposes analysis and comparative assessment of interference mitigation techniques for the co-existent Non-Geostationary Earth (NGEO) and Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) systems. Spatial isolation-based link adaptation (SILA) and power control (PC) techniques are studied comparatively for the performance evaluation. The obtained optimization results show that the communication link bandwidth is more efficiently utilized in the SILA technique when compared with the PC technique because of the simultaneous prioritizing of objective functions. image

Description

Kara, Ali/0000-0002-9739-7619

Keywords

co-existent interference, exclusion zone, multi-objective optimization, power control, satellite communication, spatial isolation-based link adaptation

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2

Source

Volume

Issue

Start Page

End Page

Collections