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Communications Government Network The Military United States Wireless Networking

5G Networks Will Likely Interfere With US Weather Satellites, Navy Warns (arstechnica.com) 62

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: A U.S. Navy memo warns that 5G mobile networks are likely to interfere with weather satellites, and senators are urging the Federal Communications Commission to avoid issuing new spectrum licenses to wireless carriers until changes are made to prevent harms to weather forecasting. The FCC has already begun an auction of 24GHz spectrum that would be used in 5G networks. But Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) today wrote a letter to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, asking him to avoid issuing licenses to winning bidders "until the FCC approves the passive band protection limits that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) determine are necessary to protect critical satellite-based measurements of atmospheric water vapor needed to forecast the weather."

The internal Navy memo on the topic, written on March 27 by U.S. Naval Observatory Superintendent Marc Eckardt, was made public by Wyden and Cantwell today. The Navy memo cited NOAA and NASA studies on interference from 24GHz spectrum, which is intended for mobile use and is adjacent to spectrum used for weather operations. "[A]s such, it is expected that interference will result in a partial-to-complete loss of remotely sensed water-vapor measurements," the Navy memo said. "It is also expected that impacts will be concentrated in urban areas of the United States first." The problem could affect Navy and Marine Corps forecasts of tropical cyclones as well as rain, ice, and snow, the memo said. The Navy memo recommends asking the FCC to "tighten out-of-band interference by reducing bleed-over limits to -57dB." The memo also says the Navy should "work with NOAA and NASA to continually assess and quantify actual impacts" and develop mitigations including "limited use of other channels, substitution of lesser-fidelity parameters, and the development of new techniques and algorithms through new research and development."

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5G Networks Will Likely Interfere With US Weather Satellites, Navy Warns

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  • Non-issue (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Tuesday May 14, 2019 @08:30PM (#58593906)

    Nobody is actually going to deliver anything on this spectrum anytime soon... if ever. This spectrum is just used to stick something with outrageous speeds in the spec, then the wireless carriers use the "lightning fast" performance of 5G as a selling point but actually provide below 6ghz and essentially the same speed as 4G but cheaper for them to operate service plus sell all new phones. They actually did something similar with 4G which is why you don't and never will have what they originally sold you on as 4G.

    • Nobody is actually going to deliver anything on this spectrum anytime soon... if ever.

      You're probably right. We'd likely be better off if they don't, since as soon as the mean user can download game play for Candy Crush or a Fakebook picture a smidgen faster, it'll be fuck all to the early warning weather alert system.

    • by zmooc ( 33175 )

      I'm a layman in this matter and am not sure what I was promised back in the days, but I don't think there are many things for which the 250Mbit down / 10Mbit up that my phone reports (probably 20/10 in real-life applications) are not sufficient. And for that matter, I also don't think that from a consumer perspective there's any reason for 5G.

  • I feel like maybe someone should have brought this up before the rest of the world had already deployed their 5G networks.

  • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Tuesday May 14, 2019 @08:58PM (#58594022)

    Why would you want to use 25GHz anyway?
    It's one of the frequencies that water in the atmosphere absorbs.
    Stick to between 5cm and 10m wavelengths.

    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Tuesday May 14, 2019 @09:28PM (#58594094) Journal

      That band around 2.4 GHz a great region. Everyone should use it.
      Hmm, maybe that's why everyone does use it. Total bandwidth of the entire band, for all users and all uses, is on the order of 10Gbs or so. 5G is planning for 10 Gbps *per person*. So unless you're the only person uaing it, that band won't work for 5G.

      For the kind of bandwidth wanted from 5G, you need a much higher frequency band. Which also means it won't go through walls, rain, etc.

      Physics is a bitch when you want to stream HD on a mobile all day.

    • That's exactly why you want it. The majority of the overall throughput increase in cell networks has come not from improving the coding or increasing the frequency allocations, but from reducing the cell sizes. In areas where the network is in high demand, you want something with a shorter range so you can pack more cells in, because each cell has its own separate throughput.

      Lower frequencies (which generally have a longer range) are for areas with lower demand, where you want bigger cells.

  • They should have cautioned that 5G frequencies were dangerously close to the HARM [wikipedia.org] missile receive window. And these weapons have a particular affinity for streaming video.

  • I thought that 'weather satellies tended to be up at geosync orbit - 25,000 miles or so. and shouldn't be affected by phones.

    • The lower they are, the more detail they can gather data with. Polar orbits are good for weather satellites. The problem is the instrumentation they use overlaps with the proposed 5G frequencies.

  • Is it really a problem? Isn't such high frequency very short range? That would mean the satellite signal and cell signal wouldn't mix because there is too much atmosphere between the two.

    And if the signal is strong enough to reach the satellites, wouldn't it be very diffuse then, more like a background noise? If so, it could even help [wikipedia.org].

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Certain frequency work best when illuminating water vapour for density analysis. So 5G seems to be pushing into frequencies where water interacts more and we are made of water, so lots of transmitter probably not the best idea.

The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the `social sciences' is: some do, some don't. -- Ernest Rutherford

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