Young model

Young model is a radio propagation model that was built on the data collected on New York City. It typically models the behaviour of cellular communication systems in large cities.

Applicable to/under conditions

This model is ideal for modeling the behaviour of cellular communications in large cities with tall structures.

Coverage

Frequency: 150 MHz to 3700 MHz

History

Young model was built on the data of 1952 in New York City.[1]

Mathematical formulation

The mathematical formulation for Young model is:

L = G B G M ( h B h M d 2 ) 2 β {\displaystyle L\;=\;G_{B}\;G_{M}\;\left({\frac {h_{B}\;h_{M}}{d^{2}}}\right)^{2}\beta }

Where,

L = path loss. Unit: decibel (dB)
GB = gain of base transmitter. Unit: decibel (dB)
GM = gain of mobile transmitter. Unit: decibel (dB)
hB = height of base station antenna. Unit: meter (m)
hM = height of mobile station antenna. Unit: meter (m)
d = link distance. Unit: kilometer (km)
β {\displaystyle \beta } = clutter factor

See also

References

  1. ^ Comparison of Mobile Radio Transmission at 150, 450, 900, and 3700 Mc, W. Rae Young, Jr., 1952, Bell System Technical Journal