Main Content

fspl

Free space path loss

Description

L = fspl(R,lambda) returns the free space path loss in decibels for a waveform with wavelength lambda propagated over a distance of R meters. The minimum value of L is zero, indicating no path loss.

example

Examples

collapse all

Calculate the free-space path loss (in dB) of a 10 GHz radar signal over a distance of 10 km.

fc = 10.0e9;
lambda = physconst('LightSpeed')/fc;
R = 10e3;
L = fspl(R,lambda)
L = 
132.4478

Input Arguments

collapse all

Propagation distance of signal, in meters, specified as a real-valued 1-by-M or M-by-1 vector.

Wavelength in meters, specified as a real-valued 1-by-N or N-by-1 vector. The wavelength is the speed of propagation divided by the signal frequency.

Output Arguments

collapse all

Path loss in decibels, returned as a M-by-N non-negative matrix. A value of 0 signifies no path loss.

When lambda is a scalar, L has the same dimensions as R.

More About

collapse all

Free Space Path Loss

The free-space path loss, L, in decibels is:

L=20log10(4πRλ)

This formula assumes that the target is in the far-field of the transmitting element or array. In the near-field, the free-space path loss formula is not valid and can result in a loss smaller than 0 dB, equivalent to a signal gain. For this reason, the loss is set to 0 dB for range values R ≤ λ/4π.

References

[1] Proakis, J. Digital Communications. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001.

Extended Capabilities

Version History

Introduced in R2017b

See Also

| |