In this paper, a novel and deeper physical interpretation on the recently published Málaga or ℳ statistical distribution is provided. This distribution, which is having a wide acceptance by the scientific community, models the optical irradiance scintillation induced by the atmospheric turbulence. Here, the analytical expressions previously published are modified in order to express them by a mixture of the known Generalized-K and discrete Binomial and Negative Binomial distributions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this paper, novel analytical closed-form expressions are derived for the probability density function of the sum of identically distributed correlated gamma-gamma random variables that models an optical atmospheric channel communication with receiver spatial diversity. The mathematical expressions here proposed provide a general procedure to obtain information about the scintillation effects induced by turbulence over a diversity reception scheme implementing equal-gain combining method. Both, validity and accuracy of the obtained statistical distribution are corroborated by comparing the analytical results to numerical results obtained by Monte-Carlo simulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this Letter, closed-form expressions of ergodic capacity, outage probability, and outage rate are derived for an atmospheric optical communication link using intensity modulation and direct detection with unbounded optical wavefront propagating through a homogeneous and isotropic turbulent medium. The optical scintillation of the received signal is modeled with the recently proposed Málaga or M turbulence distribution. By taking advantage of this unifying statistical model, the expressions here presented are valid for all possible irradiance fluctuation conditions, leading to direct relationships between turbulence parameters and link capacity performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, a new and generalized statistical model, called M or Málaga distribution, was proposed to model the irradiance fluctuations of an unbounded optical wavefront (plane and spherical waves) propagating through a turbulent medium under all irradiance fluctuation conditions in homogeneous, isotropic turbulence. Málaga distribution was demonstrated to have the advantage of unifying most of the proposed statistical models derived until now in the bibliography in a closed-form expression providing, in addition, an excellent agreement with published plane wave and spherical wave simulation data over a wide range of turbulence conditions (weak to strong). Now, such a model is completed by including the adverse effect of pointing error losses due to misalignment.
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