EURASIP Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking 
Volume 2007 (2007), Article ID 98942, 10 pages
doi:10.1155/2007/98942
Research Article

Investigations in Satellite MIMO Channel Modeling: Accent on Polarization

Péter Horváth,1 George K. Karagiannidis,2 Peter R. King,3 Stavros Stavrou,3 and István Frigyes1

1Department of Broadband Infocommunications and Electromagnetic Theory, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budapest H-1111, Hungary
2Division of Telecommunications, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece
3Centre for Communication Systems Research, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, UK

Received 30 September 2006; Accepted 19 March 2007

Recommended by Ray E. Sheriff

Abstract

Due to the much different environment in satellite and terrestrial links, possibilities in and design of MIMO systems are rather different as well. After pointing out these differences and problems arising from them, two MIMO designs are shown rather well adapted to satellite link characteristics. Cooperative diversity seems to be applicable; its concept is briefly presented without a detailed discussion, leaving solving particular satellite problems to later work. On the other hand, a detailed discussion of polarization time-coded diversity (PTC) is given. A physical-statistical model for dual-polarized satellite links is presented together with measuring results validating the model. The concept of 3D polarization is presented as well as briefly describing compact 3D-polarized antennas known from the literature and applicable in satellite links. A synthetic satellite-to-indoor link is constructed and its electromagnetic behavior is simulated via the FDTD (finite-difference time-domain) method. Previous result of the authors states that in 3D-PTC situations, MIMO capacity can be about two times higher than SIMO (single-input multiple-output) capacity while a diversity gain of nearly 2×3 is further verified via extensive FDTD computer simulation.