Multiple Acess Techniques
Multiple Acess Techniques
Multiple Acess Techniques
• It is very cost effective for small users who have to pay for using the
transponder capacity only for the time it was actually used.
Random multiple access (RMA)
•Access to the link or the transponder is by contention.
•Different Earth stations are able to access the total available bandwidth of
satellite transponder by virtue of their different carrier frequencies, thus
avoiding interference among multiple signals.
•Multichannel per carrier (MCPC) technique, where the Earth station frequency
multiplexes several channels into one carrier base band assembly, which then
frequency modulates an RF carrier and transmits it to an FDMA satellite
transponder.
Fig: Carrier frequencies for a C band transponder for both uplink and downlink channels
Fig: Basic concept of FDMA
•Single channel per carrier (SCPC), each signal channel modulates a separate
RF carrier, which is then transmitted to the FDMA transponder.
•The maximum number of carriers that can access the transponder is given
by (n = BTR/BC), where BTR is the total transponder bandwidth and BC is the
carrier bandwidth.
Demand Assigned FDMA
•The transponder frequency is subdivided into a number of channels
and the Earth station is assigned a channel depending upon its request
to the control station.
•In the polling method, the master Earth station continuously polls all
of the Earth stations in sequence and if the request is encountered,
frequency slots are assigned to that Earth station which had made the
request.
•SPADE (single channel per carrier PCM multiple access demand assignment
equipment) was the first operational SCPC/PSK/FDMA system.
•This system employs PCM for base band signal encoding and QPSK as the
carrier modulation technique.
•The traffic bursts from different Earth stations are synchronized so that all bursts
arriving at the transponder are closely spaced but do not overlap.
•The transponder works on a single burst at a time and retransmits back to Earth a
sequence of bursts.
•All Earth stations can receive the entire sequence and extract the signal of their
interest.
•The disadvantages of TDMA include a requirement for complex and expensive Earth
station equipment and stringent timing and synchronization requirements.
•CDMA allows multiple Earth stations to access the same carrier frequency and bandwidth at
the same time.
•Message signal is a PCM bit stream. Each message bit is combined with a predetermined code
bit sequence.
•The bit rate of the PN sequence is kept much higher than the bit rate of the message signal.
•The spread of the message signal over the entire available bandwidth of the transponder
referred to as spread spectrum multiple access (SSMA).
•The PN sequence bits are often referred to as ‘chips’ and their transmission rate as the ‘chip
rate’
DS-CDMA Transmission and Reception
•
Fig: Basic block schematic arrangement of the
DS-CDMA receiver
If the signals represented by suffix j constitute undesired
signals, i.e. noise, then the bit stream present at the output of
the first stage of the receiver and at the input of the
demodulator is given by
Frequency Hopping CDMA (FH-CDMA) System
•A given user transmits only during one of the M time slots each
frame has been divided into.
•Since each user transmits its data only during one of the M time slots
in each frame, the bandwidth available to it increases by a factor of
M.
Fig a: Block schematic arrangement of a
typical TH-CDMA transmitter
•FH-CDMA system uses only a small part of the bandwidth at a given instant of
time when it transmits.
•In the case of time hopping CDMA (TH-CDMA) the whole of the available
bandwidth is used for short time periods instead of parts of the bandwidth
being used all the time
Frequency–time graphs of (a) DS-CDMA system (b) FH-CDMA system and (c)
TH-CDMA system
Problem
In a DS-CDMA system, the information bit rate and chip rate are
respectively 20 kbps and 20 Mbps. Determine the processing
gain in dB and also determine the noise reduction (in dB)
achievable in this system.
Solution:
Chip rate = 20 Mbps
Information bit rate = 20 kbps
Processing gain = 10 log (chip rate/information bit rate)
= 10 log (20 × 106/20 × 103) = 10 log(1000) = 30 dB
Noise reduction achievable = processing gain = 30 dB
Space Domain Multiple Access (SDMA)