Radio Spectrum: From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Radio Spectrum: From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Radio Spectrum: From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
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Radio spectrum refers to the part of the electromagnetic spectrum corresponding to radio frequencies that is, frequencies lower than around 300 GHz (or, equivalently, wavelengths longer than about 1 mm). Different parts of the radio spectrum are used for different radio transmission technologies and applications. Radio spectrum is typically government regulated in developed countries and, in some cases, is sold or licensed to operators of private radio transmission systems (for example, cellular telephone operators or broadcast television stations). Ranges of allocated frequencies are often referred to by their provisioned use (for example, cellular spectrum or television spectrum).[1]
Contents
[hide]
1 By frequency
o o o o
1.1 ITU 1.2 IEEE US 1.3 EU, NATO, US ECM frequency designations 1.4 Waveguide frequency bands
2 By application
o o o o o o o o o
2.1 Broadcasting 2.2 Air band 2.3 Marine band 2.4 Amateur radio frequencies 2.5 Citizens' band and personal radio services 2.6 Industrial, scientific, medical 2.7 Land mobile bands 2.8 Radio control 2.9 Radar
[edit]By
frequency
A band is a small section of the spectrum of radio communication frequencies, in which channels are usually used or set aside for the same purpose. Above 300 GHz, the absorption of electromagnetic radiation by Earth's atmosphere is so great that the atmosphere is effectively opaque, until it becomes transparent again in the near-infrared and optical window frequency ranges. To prevent interference and allow for efficient use of the radio spectrum, similar services are allocated in bands. For example, broadcasting, mobile radio, or navigation devices, will be allocated in non-overlapping ranges of frequencies. Each of these bands has a basic bandplan which dictates how it is to be used and shared, to avoid interference and to set protocol for the compatibility of transmitters and receivers. As a matter of convention, bands are divided at wavelengths of 10n metres, or frequencies of 310n hertz. For example, 30 MHz or 10 m divides shortwave (lower and longer) from VHF (shorter and higher). These are the parts of the radio spectrum, and not its frequency allocation.
Band name
Abbr
ITU band
Example uses
< 3 Hz
> 100,000 km
ELF
SLF
ULF
VLF
Navigation, time signals, submarine communication, wireless heart rate monitors, geophysics
Low frequency
LF
30300 kHz 10 km 1 km
Navigation, time signals, AM longwave broadcasting (Europe and parts of Asia), RFID, amateur radio
Medium frequency
MF
High frequency
HF
Shortwave broadcasts, citizens' band radio, amateur radio and over-the-horizon aviation communications, RFID, Over-the-horizon radar,Automatic link establishment (ALE) / Near Vertical Incidence Skywave (NVIS) radio communications, Marine and mobile radio telephony
VHF
30300 MHz 10 m 1 m
FM, television broadcasts and line-of-sight ground-to-aircraft and aircraft-to-aircraft communications. Land Mobile and Maritime Mobile communications, amateur radio, weather radio
UHF
Television broadcasts, microwave ovens, microwave devices/communications, radio astronomy, mobile phones, wireless LAN,Bluetooth, ZigBee, GPS and two-way radios such as Land
SHF
10
radio astronomy, microwave devices/communications, wireless LAN, most modern radars, communications satellites, satellite television broadcasting, DBS, amateur radio
EHF
11
30300 GHz 10 mm 1 mm
radio astronomy, high-frequency microwave radio relay, microwave remote sensing, amateur radio, directed-energy weapon, millimeter wave scanner
THz or THF
12
Terahertz imaging a potential replacement for X-rays in some medical applications, ultrafast molecular dynamics, condensedmatter physics, terahertz time-domain spectroscopy, terahertz computing/communications, sub-mm remote sensing, amateur radio
[edit]ITU
The ITU radio bands are designations defined in the ITU Radio Regulations. Article 2, provision No. 2.1 states that "the radio spectrum shall be subdivided into nine frequency bands, which shall be designated by progressive whole numbers in accordance with the following table[2]". The table originated with a recommendation of the IVth CCIR meeting, held in Bucharest in 1937, and was approved by the International Radio Conference held at Atlantic City in 1947. The idea to give each band a number, in which the number is the logarithm of the approximate geometric mean of the upper and lower band limits in Hz, originated with B.C. Fleming-Williams, who suggested it in a letter to the editor of Wireless Engineer in 1942. (For example, the approximate geometric mean of Band 7 is 10 MHz, or 107 Hz.)[3]
VLF
3 to 30 kHz
10 to 100 km
LF
30 to 300 kHz
1 to 10 km
MF
100 to 1000 m
HF
3 to 30 MHz
10 to 100 m
VHF
30 to 300 MHz
1 to 10 m
UHF
10 to 100 cm
10
SHF
3 to 30 GHz
1 to 10 cm
11
EHF
30 to 300 GHz
1 to 10 mm
12
0.1 to 1 mm
This column does not form part of the table in Provision No. 2.1 of the Radio Regulations
[edit]IEEE
US
Table of IEEE bands[4]
[edit]EU,
Band
Frequency range
Origin of name
[citation needed]
A band 0 to 0.25 GHz HF band 3 to 30 MHz High Frequency B band 0.25 to 0.5 GHz VHF band 30 to 300 MHz Very High Frequency C band 0.5 to 1.0 GHz
R band
D band
UHF band
L band
1 to 2 GHz
Long wave
E band 2 to 3 GHz
E band
3.95 to
5.85 GHz
C band
4 to 8 GHz
G band 4 to 6 GHz
F band
H band 6 to 8 GHz X band 8 to 12 GHz Used in WW II for fire control, X for cross (as in crosshair)
C band
I band
Ku band
12 to 18 GHz
Kurz-under
K band
18 to 27 GHz
K band 20 to 40 GHz
Ka band
27 to 40 GHz
Kurz-above
L band 40 to 60 GHz
Ku band
V band
40 to 75 GHz
K band
W band
75 to 110 GHz
Q band
33 to 50 GHz
U band
40 to 60 GHz
V band
50 to 75 GHz
W band
75 to 110 GHz
Y band [edit]By
application
[edit]Broadcasting
Broadcast frequencies:
Longwave AM Radio = 148.5 283.5 kHz (LF) Mediumwave AM Radio = 530 kHz 1710 kHz (MF) Shortwave AM Radio = 3 MHz 30 MHz (HF)
Designations for television and FM radio broadcast frequencies vary between countries, see Television channel frequencies and FM broadcast band. Since VHF and UHF frequencies are desirable for many uses in urban areas, in North America some parts of the former television broadcasting band have been reassigned to cellular phone and various land mobile communications systems. Even within the allocation still dedicated to television, TV-band devices use channels without local broadcasters. The Apex band in the United States was a pre-WWII allocation for VHF audio broadcasting; it was made obsolete after the introduction of FM broadcasting.
[edit]Air
band
Airband refers to VHF frequencies used for navigation and voice communication with aircraft. Trans-oceanic aircraft also carry HF radio and satellite transceivers.
[edit]Marine
band
The greatest incentive for development of radio was the need to communicate with ships out of visual range of shore. From the very early days of radio, large oceangoing vessels carried powerful long-wave and mediumwave transmitters. High-frequency allocations are still designated for ships, although satellite systems have taken over some of the safety applications previously served by 500 kHzand other frequencies. 2182 kHz is a medium-wave frequency still used for marine emergency communication. Marine VHF radio is used in coastal waters and relatively short-range communication between vessels and to shore stations. Radios are channelized, with different channels used for different purposes; marine Channel 16 is used for calling and emergencies.
[edit]Amateur
radio frequencies
Amateur radio frequency allocations vary around the world. Several bands are common for amateurs worldwide, usually in the shortwave part of the spectrum. Other bands are national or regional allocations only due to differing allocations for other services, especially in the VHF and UHF parts of the radio spectrum.
[edit]Citizens'
Citizens' band radio is allocated in many countries, using channelized radios in the upper HF part of the spectrum (around 27 MHz). It used for personal, small business and hobby purposes. Other frequency allocations are used for similar services in different jurisdictions, for example UHF CB is allocated in Australia. A wide range of personal radio services exist around the world, usually emphasizing short-range communication between individuals or for small businesses, simplified or no license requirements, and usually FM transceivers using around 1 watt or less.
[edit]Industrial,
scientific, medical
The ISM bands were initially reserved for non-communications uses of RF energy, such as microwave ovens, radio-frequency heating, and similar purposes. Many unlicensed devices such as cordless telephones or wireless computer networks now use ISM frequencies, with no expectation of regulatory protection from primary ISM devices.
[edit]Land
mobile bands
Bands of frequencies, especially in the VHF and UHF parts of the spectrum, are allocated for communication between fixed base stations and land mobile vehicle-mounted or portable transceivers. In the United States these services are informally known as business band radio. See also Professional mobile radio. Police radio and other public safety services such as fire departments and ambulances are generally found in the VHF and UHF parts of the spectrum. Trunking systems are often used to make most efficient use of the limited number of frequencies available. The demand for mobile telephone service has led to large blocks of radio spectrum allocated to cellular frequencies.
[edit]Radio
control
Reliable radio control uses bands dedicated to the purpose. Radio-controlled toys may use portions of unlicensed spectrum in the 27 MHz or 49 MHz bands, but more costly aircraft, boat, or land vehicle models use dedicated remote control frequencies near 72 MHz to avoid interference by unlicensed uses. Licensed amateur radio operators use portions of the 6-meter band in North America. Industrial remote control of cranes or railway locomotives use assigned frequencies that vary by area.
[edit]Radar
Radar applications use relatively high power pulse transmitters and sensitive receivers, so radar is operated on bands not used for other purposes. Most radar bands are in the microwave part of the spectrum, although certain important applications for meteorology make use of powerful transmitters in the UHF band.
[edit]See
also
http://www.scribd.com/doc/52056379/real-wireless-report-ofcom-low-power