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Performance enhancement of hybrid‐SIM for optical wireless downlink communication with aperture averaging and receiver diversity
Author(s) -
Dubey Dheeraj,
Prajapati Yogendra Kumar,
Tripathi Rajeev
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
iet communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.355
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1751-8636
pISSN - 1751-8628
DOI - 10.1049/iet-com.2020.0261
Subject(s) - aperture (computer memory) , fading , bit error rate , scintillation , antenna diversity , telecommunications link , subcarrier , time diversity , physics , optics , free space optical communication , optical communication , electronic engineering , telecommunications , computer science , wireless , channel (broadcasting) , acoustics , orthogonal frequency division multiplexing , engineering , detector
Error performance of hybrid subcarrier intensity modulation (hybrid‐SIM) in optical free‐space satellite downlink has been studied in this work. Bit error rate (BER) is improved by aperture averaging and spatial receiver diversity and it is found out be effective in strong turbulence regime. Subsequently, the reduction in scintillation index has been investigated by implementing a single large receiver and an array of point receivers of length n R with the same effective aperture area. Moreover, the BER at different turbulence conditions is compared with minimum shift keying and multiple levels of pulse position modulation pertaining to aperture averaging. Upon analysing the single input multiple outputs (SIMO) system, the desired response is obtained above a certain threshold in average received irradiance. At different zenith angles and turbulence strengths for n R = 4 , the threshold is 4.59 and 3.35 dB, respectively, and it rises by 13.6 and 26.43 dB when n R is increased to 9. This constraint can be exploited to optimise the number of receivers concerning system requirement and availability. Further, the pointing error effects are also investigated for SISO and SIMO systems, which takes into account both atmospheric turbulence and misalignment induced fading.

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