Abstract

In the network planning and design of terrestrial and earth-space communication links, the slant path attenuation caused by rain and its associated strong winds is of interest. Rain causes severe link degradation to radio links by absorbing parts or the whole signal during propagation. This study predicts slant path attenuation by rain in three (3) Northern Nigerian zones using the International Telecommunications Unions (ITU-R) model for 10 to 40 GHz. The effect of specific attenuation, rain attenuation, and elevation angle on the received signal strength is analyzed. The ITU-R model suggests rain attenuation values ranging from 4.26 dB to 31.67 dB for Jaji, Wudil, and Potiskum. The results further indicate a decrease in rain attenuation with an increase in elevation angle up to 50.1° elevation for the three (3) monitored stations, which starts to decrease steadily after this threshold. Results from this study can aid the network engineer in anticipating network changes and planning fade mitigation techniques where necessary.

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