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Radio resource management across multiple protocol layers in satellite networks: a tutorial overview
Authors:Paolo Barsocchi  Nedo Celandroni  Franco Davoli  Erina Ferro  Giovanni Giambene  Francisco Javier Gonzlez Castao  Alberto Gotta  Jose Ignacio Moreno  Petia Todorova
Affiliation:Paolo Barsocchi,Nedo Celandroni,Franco Davoli,Erina Ferro,Giovanni Giambene,Francisco Javier González Castaño,Alberto Gotta,Jose Ignacio Moreno,Petia Todorova
Abstract:Satellite transmissions have an important role in telephone communications, television broadcasting, computer communications, maritime navigation, and military command and control. Moreover, in many situations they may be the only possible communication set‐up. Trends in telecommunications indicate that four major growth market/service areas are messaging and navigation services (wireless and satellite), mobility services (wireless and satellite), video delivery services (cable and satellite), and interactive multimedia services (fibre/cable, satellite). When using geostationary satellites (GEO), the long propagation delay may have great impact, given the end‐to‐end delay user's requirements of relevant applications; moreover, atmospheric conditions may seriously affect data transmission. Since satellite bandwidth is a relatively scarce resource compared to the terrestrial one (e.g. in optical transport networks), and the environment is harsher, resource management of the radio segment plays an important role in the system's efficiency and economy. The radio resource management (RMM) entity is responsible for the utilization of the air interface resources, and covers power control, handover, admission control, congestion control, bandwidth allocation, and packet scheduling. RRM functions are crucial for the best possible utilization of the capacity. RRM functions can be implemented in different ways, thus having an impact on the overall system efficiency. This tutorial aims to provide an overview of satellite transmission aspects at various OSI layers, with emphasis on the MAC layer; some cross‐layer solutions for bandwidth allocation are also indicated. Far from being an exhaustive survey (mainly due to the extensive nature of the subject), it offers the readers an extensive bibliography, which could be used for further research on specific aspects. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:satellite communications  resource management  layered architecture  cross‐layer optimization  QoS requirements  CAC  traffic patterns
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