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Figure 115111: Illustration of the Coverage Radius and the Simulation Radius with respect to the pairs of transmitters and receivers of the victim and interfering links Anchor F111 F111
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The distance between the VLT and the VLR is referred to as the coverage radius (
) (see ANNEX 13:). In the case of mobile applications, the number of terminals that may transmit in a given cell of the network is given by: Mathinline body R_{max}^{wt}
(Eq. 25)
The calculation of the coverage radius can be found in ANNEX 13:.
The cluster characterises the frequency re-use of a mobile network (see Figure 116112).
Figure 116112: Frequency cluster Anchor F112 F112
The victim link coverage radius (i.e. centred on the victim link transmitter) may then be calculated by using the formula below. Figure 117´presents 113 presents how to set-up SEAMCAT.
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Anchor
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F113
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F113
Figure 117113: Calculation of the victim link coverage radius
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(Eq. 27)
Figure 119 115 presents the results of the dRSS vector and the results in the coverage radius of the victim link.
The dRSS for a receiver located at the edge of the coverage area may be calculated:
dRSS = 30 (dBm) + 9 + 9 - (32.5 + 10 log(1.43^2) + 20 log(1000)) = -47.5 dBm
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Figure 118114: Resulting dRSS distribution Anchor F114 F114
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Figure 119115: Calculation results of the victim link coverage radius Anchor F115 F115
Anchor F120
Figure 120116: Illustration of the VLR and VLT positioning based on the traffic limited network coverage radius (ILT-red, ILR-green, VLR-yellow, VLT-blue)F120
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