RadioPlanner 2.1 uses the following propagation models:- ITU-R P.1812-4 model- Longley-Rice (ITM) model v 1.2.2- ITU-R P.1546-6 model (for broadcasting only)- Combined ITU-R P.528-3 + P.526-14 model (for aeronautical radio only)RadioPlanner 2.1 performs various RF prediction types for mobile networks:- Received Power uplink/downlink- Strongest Server (Best Server)- C/I ratio- Area with Signal above Both the Base and Mobile Thresholds- Number of servers above uplinkArea studies for terrestrial radio and television broadcast transmitters:- Field Strength at the Receiver Location- Strongest Server (Best Server)- FCC contours- ITU-R P.1546-6 contours- Calculation of the population in the coverage area based on the OpenStreetMap project database- Generation of the list of localities covered by broadcastingArea studies for air-to-ground communication systems:- Received power Air-to-Ground link- Received power Ground-to-Air link- Strongest (most likely) Server Air-to-Ground linkRadioPlanner allows you to do:- Frequency planning of radio networks considering co-channel and adjacent channels interference- Points calculation showing the path profile, losses, and levels of the signal and interference on co-channel and adjacent channels- Calculation of uplink/downlink Rx levels for a set of IoT end-devices: LoRa, SigFox, and others, located in different conditions.- Import the measurement results of the received signal power levels for comparison with calculated values and adjust propagation model parameters- Save the coverage prediction result as an interactive web page, PNG image, CSV file, MIF file, or a KMZ file- Flexible adjusting of the layers on the base map and show custom vector layersGIS features:- Terrain elevation data 2-30-m plane resolution (for more details on data sources see Appendix 3. Terrain Elevation Data in User Manual)- A clutter model with nine clutter types. The built-in clutter model was created from the OpenStreetMap (www.openstreetmap.org) and Global Forest Change (www.earthenginepartners.appspot.com) projects. If necessary, the simple and easy-to-use Clutter Editor will allow the user to prepare their own clutter model based on new satellite imagery.- Any kind of base map—both common (such as OpenStreetMap, OpenTopoMap, US Topo, etc.) and custom ones.
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