Pathloss 4 Site

[ PL \propto d^4 ]

[ d_BP = \frac4 \pi h_t h_r\lambda ]

In wireless communications, the term "Pathloss 4" refers to a specific propagation environment where the received signal power decays as the fourth power of the distance between the transmitter and receiver. This is in contrast to free-space pathloss, which follows a square law (exponent of 2). Formally, pathloss ( PL ) in such a scenario is proportional to: pathloss 4

where ( d ) is the distance. In decibel terms, this means that for every doubling of distance, pathloss increases by (since ( 10 \log_10(2^4) = 12 ) dB), compared to 6 dB per distance doubling in free space. When Does Pathloss 4 Occur? The fourth-power law is a hallmark of the two-ray ground reflection model . This model considers both the direct line-of-sight path and a reflected path from the ground (or another large flat surface). When the transmitter and receiver are at similar heights above a reflecting plane, and the distance is large compared to antenna heights, the two signals arrive at the receiver with nearly equal amplitude but opposite phase. The result is destructive interference, causing the net power to drop as ( 1/d^4 ). [ PL \propto d^4 ] [ d_BP =

[ P_r = P_t \cdot G_t \cdot G_r \cdot \left( \frach_t^2 h_r^2d^4 \right) ] In decibel terms, this means that for every

Scroll to Top