Abstract

The high-speed railway propagation channel has significant effect on the design and performance analysis of wireless railway control systems. An important feature of the high-speed railway communications is the usage of directional transmitting antennas, due to which the receiver may experience strong attenuation of the line-of-sight (LOS) path under the base station (BS). This leads to a drop, and strong variations, of the signal strength under the BS. While the physical origin of the signal variations is different from conventional shadowing, it can be described by similar statistical methods. However, the effect has been largely neglected in the literature. In this paper we first define the region of the bottom of the BS, and then present a simple shadow fading model based on the measurements performed in high-speed railways at 930 MHz. It is found that the bottom area of the BS has a range of 400 m – 800 m; the standard deviation of the shadowing also follows a Gaussian distribution; the double exponential model fits the autocovariance of the shadow fading very well. We find that the directivity of the transmitting antenna leads to a higher standard deviation of shadowing and a smaller decorrelation distance under the BS compared to the region away from the BS.

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