Misplaced Pages

Coherence time (communications systems)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Duration a communication channel's impulse response is effectively constant Not to be confused with Coherence bandwidth.

In communications systems, a communication channel may change with time. Coherence time is the time duration over which the channel impulse response is considered to be not varying. Such channel variation is much more significant in wireless communications systems, due to Doppler effects.

Simple model

In a simple model, a signal x ( t ) {\displaystyle x(t)} transmitted at time t 1 {\displaystyle t_{1}} will be received as

y t 1 ( t ) = x ( t t 1 ) h t 1 ( t ) , {\displaystyle y_{t_{1}}(t)=x(t-t_{1})*h_{t_{1}}(t),}

where h t 1 ( t ) {\displaystyle h_{t_{1}}(t)} is the channel impulse response (CIR) at time t 1 {\displaystyle t_{1}} . A signal transmitted at time t 2 {\displaystyle t_{2}} will be received as

y t 2 ( t ) = x ( t t 2 ) h t 2 ( t ) . {\displaystyle y_{t_{2}}(t)=x(t-t_{2})*h_{t_{2}}(t).}

Now, if h t 1 ( t ) h t 2 ( t ) {\displaystyle h_{t_{1}}(t)-h_{t_{2}}(t)} is relatively small, the channel may be considered constant within the interval t 1 {\displaystyle t_{1}} to t 2 {\displaystyle t_{2}} .

Coherence time ( T c {\displaystyle T_{c}} ) will therefore be given by

T c = t 2 t 1 . {\displaystyle T_{c}=t_{2}-t_{1}.}

Relation with Doppler frequency

Coherence time T c {\displaystyle T_{c}} is the time-domain dual of Doppler spread and is used to characterize the time-varying nature of the frequency dispersiveness of the channel in the time domain. The Maximum Doppler spread and coherence time are inversely proportional to one another. That is, T c 1 f m {\displaystyle T_{c}\approx {\frac {1}{f_{m}}}} where ( f m ) {\displaystyle (f_{m})} is the maximum Doppler spread or, maximum Doppler frequency or, maximum Doppler shift given by f m = v c f c 2 {\displaystyle f_{m}={\frac {v}{c}}f_{c}*2} with f c {\displaystyle f_{c}} being the center frequency of the emitter.

Coherence time is actually a statistical measure of the time duration over which the channel impulse response is essentially invariant, and quantifies the similarity of the channel response at different times. In other words, coherence time is the time duration over which two received signals have a strong potential for amplitude correlation. If the reciprocal bandwidth of the baseband signal is greater than the coherence time of the channel, then the channel will change during the transmission of the baseband message, thus causing distortion at the receiver. If the coherence time is defined as the time over which the time correlation function is above 0.5, then the coherence time is approximately,

T c 9 16 π f m {\displaystyle T_{c}\approx {\frac {9}{16\pi f_{m}}}}

In practice, the first approximation of coherence time suggests a time duration during which a Rayleigh fading signal may fluctuate wildly, and the second approximation is often too restrictive. A popular rule of thumb for modern digital communications is to define the coherence time as the geometric mean of the two approximate values, also known as Clarke's model; from the maximum Doppler frequency f m {\displaystyle f_{m}} we can obtain 50% coherence time

T c = 9 16 π f m 2 {\displaystyle T_{c}={\sqrt {\frac {9}{16\pi f_{m}^{2}}}}}

Usually, we use the following relation

T c = 9 16 π 1 f m 0.423 f m {\displaystyle T_{c}={\sqrt {\frac {9}{16\pi }}}{\frac {1}{f_{m}}}\simeq {\frac {0.423}{f_{m}}}}

References

  1. P. Mohana Shankar, Introduction to Wireless Systems, John Wiley & Sons, 2002
  2. ^ T.S. Rappaport, Wireless Communications, Prentice Hall, 2002
Category: