Frequency Selective Fading
In any radio transmission, the channel spectral response is not flat. It has dips or fades
in the response due to reflections causing cancellation of certain frequencies at the
receiver. Reflections off near-by objects (e.g. ground, buildings, trees, etc) can lead to
multipath signals of similar signal power as the direct signal. This can result in deep
nulls in the received signal power due to destructive interference.
For narrow bandwidth transmissions if the null in the frequency response occurs at the
transmission frequency then the entire signal can be lost. This can be partly overcome in
By transmitting a wide bandwidth signal or spread spectrum as CDMA, any dips in the
spectrum only result in a small loss of signal power, rather than a complete loss. Another
method is to split the transmission up into many small bandwidth carriers, as is done in
a COFDM/OFDM transmission. The original signal is spread over a wide bandwidth
thus, any nulls in the spectrum are unlikely to occur at all of the carrier frequencies. This
will result in only some of the carriers being lost, rather then the entire signal. The
information in the lost carriers can be recovered provided enough forward error