Friis transmission equation
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The Friis transmission formula is used in
telecommunications engineering Telecommunications Engineering is a subfield of electrical engineering which seeks to design and devise systems of communication at a distance. The work ranges from basic circuit design to strategic mass developments. A telecommunication enginee ...
, equating the power at the terminals of a receive antenna as the product of power density of the incident wave and the effective aperture of the receiving antenna under idealized conditions given another antenna some distance away transmitting a known amount of power. The formula was presented first by Danish-American radio engineer Harald T. Friis in 1946. The formula is sometimes referenced as the Friis transmission equation.


Friis' original formula

Friis' original idea behind his transmission formula was to dispense with the usage of directivity or gain when describing antenna performance. In their place is the descriptor of antenna capture area as one of two important parts of the transmission formula that characterizes the behavior of a free-space radio circuit. This leads to his published form of his transmission formula: :\frac = \left( \frac \right) where: *P_t is the power fed into the transmitting antenna input terminals; *P_r is the power available at receiving antenna output terminals; *A_r is the effective aperture area of the receiving antenna; *A_t is the effective aperture area of the transmitting antenna; *d is the distance between antennas; *\lambda is the wavelength of the radio frequency; *P_t and P_r are in the same units of power; *A_r, A_t, d^2, and \lambda^2 are in the same units. *Distance d large enough to ensure a plane wave front at the receive antenna sufficiently approximated by d \geqq 2a^2/\lambda where a is the largest linear dimension of either of the antennas. Friis stated the advantage of this formula over other formulations is the lack of numerical coefficients to remember, but does require the expression of transmitting antenna performance in terms of power flow per unit area instead of field strength and the expression of receiving antenna performance by its effective area rather than by its power gain or radiation resistance.


Contemporary formula

Few follow Friis' advice on using antenna effective area to characterize antenna performance over the contemporary use of directivity and gain metrics. Replacing the effective antenna areas with their gain counterparts yields :\frac = G_t G_r \left( \frac \right)^2 where G_t and G_r are the antenna gains (with respect to an
isotropic radiator An isotropic radiator is a theoretical point source of electromagnetic or sound waves which radiates the same intensity of radiation in all directions. It has no preferred direction of radiation. It radiates uniformly in all directions over ...
) of the transmitting and receiving antennas respectively, \lambda is the
wavelength In physics, the wavelength is the spatial period of a periodic wave—the distance over which the wave's shape repeats. It is the distance between consecutive corresponding points of the same phase on the wave, such as two adjacent crests, t ...
representing the effective aperture area of the receiving antenna, and d is the distance separating the antennas. To use the equation as written, the antenna gains are unitless values, and the units for wavelength (\lambda) and distance (d) must be the same. To calculate using decibels, the equation becomes: :P_r^\mathsf = P_t^\mathsf + G_t^\mathsf + G_r^\mathsf + 20\log_\left( \frac \right) where: * P_t^ is the power delivered to the terminals of an isotropic transmit antenna, expressed in dB. * P_r^\mathsf is the available power at the receive antenna terminals equal to the product of the power density of the incident wave and the effective aperture area of the receiving antenna proportional to \lambda^2, in dB. * G_t^\mathsf is the gain of the transmitting antenna in the direction of the receiving antenna, in dB. * G_r^\mathsf is the gain of the receiving antenna in the direction of the transmitting antenna, in dB. The simple form applies under the following conditions: * d\gg\lambda, so that each antenna is in the
far field The near field and far field are regions of the electromagnetic (EM) field around an object, such as a transmitting antenna, or the result of radiation scattering off an object. Non-radiative ''near-field'' behaviors dominate close to the ante ...
of the other. * The antennas are correctly aligned and have the same polarization. * The antennas are in unobstructed free space, with no multipath propagation. * The
bandwidth Bandwidth commonly refers to: * Bandwidth (signal processing) or ''analog bandwidth'', ''frequency bandwidth'', or ''radio bandwidth'', a measure of the width of a frequency range * Bandwidth (computing), the rate of data transfer, bit rate or thr ...
is narrow enough that a single value for the wavelength can be used to represent the whole transmission. * Directivities are both for
isotropic radiator An isotropic radiator is a theoretical point source of electromagnetic or sound waves which radiates the same intensity of radiation in all directions. It has no preferred direction of radiation. It radiates uniformly in all directions over ...
s ( dBi). * Powers are both presented in the same units: either both
dBm DBM or dbm may refer to: Science and technology * dBm, a unit for power measurement * DBM (computing), family of key-value database engines including dbm, ndbm, gdbm, and Berkeley DB * Database Manager (DBM), a component of 1987's ''Extended Edi ...
or both dBW. The ideal conditions are almost never achieved in ordinary terrestrial communications, due to obstructions, reflections from buildings, and most importantly reflections from the ground. One situation where the equation is reasonably accurate is in
satellite communications A communications satellite is an artificial satellite that relays and amplifies radio telecommunication signals via a transponder; it creates a communication channel between a source transmitter and a receiver at different locations on Earth. ...
when there is negligible atmospheric absorption; another situation is in
anechoic chamber An anechoic chamber (''an-echoic'' meaning "non-reflective") is a room designed to stop reflections of either sound or electromagnetic waves. They are also often isolated from energy entering from their surroundings. This combination means t ...
s specifically designed to minimize reflections.


Derivation

There are several methods to derive the Friis transmission equation. In addition to the usual derivation from antenna theory, the basic equation also can be derived from principles of radiometry and scalar diffraction in a manner that emphasizes physical understanding. Another derivation is to take the far-field limit of the near-field transmission integral.


See also

*
Link budget A link budget is an accounting of all of the power gains and losses that a communication signal experiences in a telecommunication system; from a transmitter, through a communication medium such as radio waves, cable, waveguide, or optical fibe ...
*
Radio propagation model Radio propagation is the behavior of radio waves as they travel, or are propagated, from one point to another in vacuum, or into various parts of the atmosphere. As a form of electromagnetic radiation, like light waves, radio waves are affected ...


References


Further reading

* Harald T. Friis, "A Note on a Simple Transmission Formula," Proceedings of the I.R.E. and Waves and Electrons, May, 1946, pp 254–256. * John D. Kraus, "Antennas," 2nd Ed., McGraw-Hill, 1988. * Kraus and Fleisch, "Electromagnetics," 5th Ed., McGraw-Hill, 1999. * D.M. Pozar, "Microwave Engineering." 2nd Ed., Wiley, 1998. *


External links


Derivation of Friis Transmission FormulaAnother Friis Transmission Equation CalculatorSeminar Notes by Laasonen
{{Radio frequency propagation models Antennas Radio frequency propagation model