1. Introduction to Power and SINR in NTN
In NTN, achieving good performance is not just about having sufficient transmit power. The real objective is to maintain a stable and optimized SINR across highly dynamic conditions.
- Long propagation distances introduce high path loss
- Satellite movement creates variation in link conditions
- Power alone cannot guarantee performance
Understanding the relationship between power budget and SINR is essential for effective optimization.
2. NTN Link Budget Basics
Power budget defines how much signal power is received after accounting for all gains and losses.
Key components:
- Transmit power (UE / Satellite)
- Antenna gain
- Free space path loss
- Atmospheric losses
- Receiver sensitivity
Simplified view:
- Received Power = Transmit Power + Gains – Losses
3. What is SINR and Why It Matters
SINR (Signal to Interference plus Noise Ratio) determines actual link quality.
- SINR impacts:
- Throughput
- Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS)
- BLER
Important:
- High power does not always mean high SINR
4. Power Budget vs SINR (Core Difference)
| Aspect | Power Budget | SINR |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Signal strength | Signal quality |
| Includes interference | No | Yes |
| Includes noise | No | Yes |
| Role | Coverage planning | Performance optimization |
| Limitation | Cannot predict throughput | Directly impacts throughput |
5. NTN Specific RF Challenges
- Extremely high free space path loss
- Beam edge attenuation
- Atmospheric effects (rain fade)
- Inter beam interference
Impact:
- Even with good power, SINR can degrade
6. Beam Edge vs Beam Center Performance
Center of Beam:
- High antenna gain
- Better SINR
- Stable throughput
Edge of Beam:
- Lower gain
- Higher interference
- SINR fluctuation
Result:
- Users at beam edge experience performance degradation
7. Interference in NTN Systems
Sources of interference:
- Adjacent beams
- Frequency reuse patterns
- Satellite payload limitations
Key insight:
- Increasing power may increase interference as well
8. Why Increasing Power is Not Always the Solution
Common misconception:
- “Low throughput → increase power”
Reality:
- Higher power:
- May increase interference
- Can worsen SINR for neighboring beams
- Leads to inefficient spectrum usage
Optimization must be balanced.
9. SINR Optimization Techniques
Effective strategies:
- Beam shaping and optimization
- Interference coordination
- Adaptive MCS selection
- Power control tuning
Goal:
- Improve signal quality, not just signal strength
10. Troubleshooting RF Performance Issues
Common symptoms:
- Good RSRP but low throughput
- High BLER
- Unstable performance at edges
Root causes:
- Poor SINR despite adequate power
- Interference dominance
- Suboptimal beam configuration
11. Optimization Strategy from RF Perspective
Key actions:
- Analyze:
- RSRP vs SINR correlation
- BLER trends
- Identify:
- Beam edge users
- Interference zones
- Optimize:
- Power control parameters
- Frequency reuse schemes
- Beam overlap

12. Practical Deployment Insights
Operators typically:
- Prioritize SINR optimization over raw power increase
- Use advanced beamforming techniques
- Apply dynamic resource allocation
Real world observation:
- Networks focusing only on power budget often underperform
13. Key Takeaways
- Power budget ensures coverage, SINR ensures performance
- Increasing power alone is not sufficient
- Interference management is critical in NTN
- RF optimization must focus on quality, not just strength

