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Signal strength variations at 2 GHz for three sea paths in the British Channel Islands: Detailed discussion and propagation modeling

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posted on 2010-01-19, 15:03 authored by S. D. Gunashekar, E. Michael Warrington, D. R. Siddle, P. Valtr
Signal strength measurements at 2 GHz have recently been made on three over-sea paths in the British Channel Islands. This paper focuses on explaining the propagation characteristics during periods of normal reception and periods of enhanced signal strength with particular emphasis on a 48.5 km transhorizon path between Jersey and Alderney. Evaporation ducting and diffraction appear to be the dominant propagation mechanisms at most times. The influence of the evaporation duct during periods of normal propagation has been confirmed by modeling the over-sea propagation conditions using Paulus-Jeske evaporation duct refractivity profiles as input to the parabolic equation method. During periods of enhanced propagation, which occur approximately 8% of the time on the longest path (48.5 km), the presence of additional higher-altitude ducting/super-refractive structures has been verified and their influence has been modeled with reasonable success.

History

Citation

Radio Science, 2007, 42, RS4019.

Published in

Radio Science

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

0048-6604

Copyright date

2007

Available date

2010-01-19

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2006RS003617/abstract

Language

en

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