1 / 29

Introduction to SEAMCAT Example of MCA study

Introduction to SEAMCAT Example of MCA study. Stella Lyubchenko European Communications Office 55 th CRAF meeting, 3 rd - 5 th April 2013 ( stella.lyubchenko@eco.cept.org ). Outline. Part 1: Why SEAMCAT?. Compatibility/sharing study tools.

oki
Download Presentation

Introduction to SEAMCAT Example of MCA study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to SEAMCATExample of MCA study Stella Lyubchenko European Communications Office 55th CRAF meeting, 3rd - 5th April 2013 (stella.lyubchenko@eco.cept.org)

  2. Outline

  3. Part 1: Why SEAMCAT?

  4. Compatibility/sharing study tools • Analytical analysis, usually by worst-case approach: • Minimum Coupling Loss (MCL) method, to establish rigid rules for minimum “separation” • Statistical analysis of random trials: • The Monte-Carlo method, to establish probability of interference for a given realistic deployment scenario • That is where SEAMCAT comes into picture!

  5. Purpose • SEAMCAT is designed for: • Generic co-existence studies between different radiocommunications systems operating in same or adjacent frequency bands • Not designed for system planning purposes • Can model any type of radio systems in terrestrial interference scenarios (mobile, broadcasting, Fixed etc..) • Used for analysis of a variety of radio compatibility scenarios: • quantification of probability of interference between various radio systems (unwanted emissions, blocking/selectivity) • quantification of throughput and data loss for CDMA and OFDMA system • Based on Monte-Carlo generation

  6. Strategic tool for CEPT • For performing compatibility/sharing studies • Used in generating studies for ECC/CEPT Reports • As a Reference tool • Recognised at ITU (Rep. ITU-R SM.2028-1) • As an agreed work platform • Project Teams (PTs) can focus on the input parameters and not on the algorithm • Sharing simulation between proponents ease the trust in the results • For educating future generation of spectrum engineer (Administrations, Industry or University)

  7. Usage within and outside CEPT Source: google analytics on the www.seamcat.org download page (May 2011/2012 period)

  8. Part 2: The Graphical User Interface

  9. Main user interface • Windows-oriented • Main element – workspace.sws Simulation controls: number of events etc.. Simulations input data – scenario: Equipment parameters, placement, propagations settings, etc. Simulation results: dRSS/iRSS vectors, Pinterference, Cellular structure

  10. Graphic interface (1/1) Easy comparison of workspaces Easy view of parameters at a glance Graphical reminders (tooltip)

  11. Graphic interface (1/2) Intuitive check of simulation scenario Shows positions and budget link information of the victim and interfering systems Overview of results (dRSS, iRSS)

  12. Part 3: Flexibility to the User’s need

  13. Simple and harmonised interface Workspaces Interfering links On-line Help Multiple interferergeneration Add Duplicate Delete

  14. Welcome + NewsHistory • Welcome + News • History

  15. Libraries and Batch • Easy to create workspaces with predefined libraries • Edit, import, export • Easy to run sequentially workspaces • Batch operation • Intuitive use

  16. Multiple vectors display Calculated vectors or external vectors Statistics and signal type

  17. Propagation model plug-in • This plug-in may be used to define ANY kind of propagation model • The plug-in may be inserted at any point where propagation model is defined in the scenario • No complexity limit • No limit to the inputs • Description of inputs

  18. Comparing propagation model Results in linear or log format Compare two or more propagation models

  19. Part 4: Systems you can simulate

  20. System type Generic CDMA OFDMA

  21. Generic system

  22. Cellular modelling • Modelling of cellular systems as victim, interferer, or both: • Quasi-static time within a snapshot • One direction at a time (uplink or downlink) • CDMA • Voice traffic only • Particular CDMA standard defined • (CDMA2000-1X, W-CDMA/UMTS) • OFDMA • LTE

  23. Part 5: Calculations in brief

  24. Interference Calculations Interference Criteria Interfering Modes Unwanted and Blocking Signals

  25. Interferer emission mask fI Unwanted Emissions • Victim Receiver Bandwidth fv • Interfering System Interfering emission mask fI

  26. Results N = -110 dBmIRSS Unwanted = - 97.78 dBmI/N = - 97.78 – (-110) = 12.21 dB ( Calculated by SEAMCAT)Interference Criterion was: I/N = 0 ( Input to SEAMCAT)

  27. Part 6: Example of MCA study

  28. Assumptions for study • The secondary RAS allocation in the band 2655 – 2690 MHz • Protection criterion -177dBm in 10MHz which should not be exceeded for 2% of time (in SEAMCAT it will be interpreted as a percentage of snapshots for which criterion is not exceeded) • Telescope height is 50 m. • 1 aircraft within 100 km (within a cylinder: 3000 m – 15000 m) • Deployment density considered: 0.0000255 km2 • For the secondary RAS allocation in the band 2655 – 2690 MHz; • Max allowed power of IT was calculated -81 dBm in 10 MHz

  29. Thank you - Any questions?

More Related