Attenuation, Path loss, Free space loss – Alvarion BREEZENET BU-DS.11 User Manual

Page 86

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BreezeNET DS.11 Series User Manual

C-2

P

dBm

= 10 x Log P

mw

For example:

1 Watt = 1000 mW; P

dBm

=

10 x Log 1000 = 30 dBm

100

mW;

P

dBm

= 10 x Log 100 = 20 dBm

For link budget calculations, the dBm convention is more convenient than the
Watts convention.

Attenuation

Attenuation (fading) of an RF signal is defined as follows:

Figure C-2: Attenuation of an RF signal

P

in

is the incident power level before attenuation

P

out

is the output power level after attenuation

Attenuation is expressed in dB as follows:

P

dB

= -10 x Log (P

out

/P

in

)

For example: If, due to attenuation, half the power is lost (P

out

/P

in

=

1/2),
attenuation in dB is -10 x Log (1/2) = 3

dB

Path Loss

Loss of power of an RF signal traveling (propagating) through space. It is expressed
in dB. Path loss depends on:
♦ The distance between transmitting and receiving antennas
♦ Line of sight clearance between the receiving and transmitting antennas
♦ Antenna height

Free Space Loss

Attenuation of the electromagnetic wave while propagating through space. This
attenuation is calculated using the following formula:

Free space loss = 32.4 + 20xLog(F

MHz

) + 20xLog(R

Km

)

F is the RF frequency expressed in MHz.

R is the distance between the transmitting and receiving antennas (expressed in
Km).

At 2.4 GHz, this formula is: 100+20xLog(R

Km

)

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