(Continuation of Questions 1 and 2/5) Motivation
The growth in demand for data services in small businesses and the home is
driving telecommunications operators to provide high bandwidth connections to
these customers. Because of the desire to reuse existing access networks (on
cost grounds) new technical approaches generally involving spread spectrum
techniques are being developed and implemented.
These techniques introduce a new family of EMC issues.
The following Recommendation, in force at the time of approval of this
Question, falls under its responsibility:
Question
This question will study the impact of spread spectrum techniques and other
modulation techniques on the electromagnetic environment. This question will
produce one or more recommendations, which will allow telecommunication network
operators to minimize the risk of interference to the user of the radio spectrum
from these new access systems. In particular the question will study whether the
increase in the probability of the existence of interfering signals generated by
the spread spectrum nature of these systems is balanced by the reduction in the
signal level at any specific frequency. Work will also review whether the
dominant mechanisms of interference remain the same for these new systems.
Topics such as dithered clocks and frequency may also be covered by this work.
As a second stream under the same question the validity of current immunity
techniques (especially the need for broadband radiated and conducted tests) for
these new systems will also be studied.
This question will also study the interference from the next generation
access systems to existing or next generation telecommunication networks
Study items to be considered include, but are not limited to:
- Prediction method for emission from broadband signals transmitting in a
cable, in particular in plural systems existing in a cable;
- EMC requirements and mitigation methodology for next generation access systems
to existing or next generation telecommunication networks systems. An important
issue is the possibility of interference from power-line broadband technologies
(access Power Line Communication, PLC) to telecommunication access systems;
- Mitigation methodology for next generation access systems to existing or next
generation telecommunication networks systems. Important issues are:
- the possibility of interference from power-line broadband technologies (access
Power Line Communication, PLC) to telecommunication access systems
- the possibility of interference from power-line broadband technologies (access
Power Line Communication, PLC) and telecommunication access systems to radio
services.
Tasks
Tasks include, but are not limited to:
- One or more recommendations detailing appropriate EMC requirements for
broadband access systems (including the consideration of the need for a separate
broadband test method and emission level), considering in particular:
- Evaluation methodology for radiated emissions from plural broadband access systems under unbundled condition and guidance for solving radio interference;
- Characterization of the radiated disturbances from broadband services;
- Evaluation of interference from power-line broadband technologies (access Power Line Communication, PLC) to telecommunication access systems;
- Maintenance and enhancement of the Recommendation K.60.
An up-to-date status of work under this Question is contained in the SG 5 Work
Program (use URL as shown in the table below).
Relationships
Recommendations:
Questions:
Study Groups:
Standardization bodies:
|