Sub-Terahertz Channel Performance under Snowfall

Abstract

The terahertz (THz) band promises terabit-per-second links but is highly sensitive to snowfall. Natural snowflakes are non-spherical. Yet existing THz studies treat them as spheres under Mie theory, and no ITU-R model covers THz snow attenuation. This work combines line-of-sight measurements at 120, 140, and 160 GHz with physics-based scattering modeling. The measured loss is compared against the ITU-R P.1817-1 optical model, Mie models, and a discrete dipole approximation (DDA) for randomly oriented hexagonal-plate ice crystals, each with the Scott and Gunn-Marshall size distributions. Over the measured band, ITU-R P.1817-1 overestimates and the Mie models underestimate the loss. The shape-aware DDA-Scott model agrees best, with the lowest RMSE at every frequency. From DDA-Scott, we derive a compact modified ITU-R expression in carrier frequency and liquid-water-equivalent (LWE) rate. It reproduces the reference to within 2.5 dB/km over 100-500 GHz and 0-3 mm/h. A Rician K-factor analysis shows the channel stays LoS-dominated, so snowfall degrades the link mainly through attenuation, not multipath fading. A QPSK/16-QAM link-budget analysis then quantifies the cost of the spherical assumption. Mie-based margins overestimate the tolerable snowfall rate by 3.4 across 120-160 GHz, rising toward 5.8 in the upper transparency windows by model extrapolation. The model is further mapped into snow-limited range and adaptive-modulation switching boundaries. These results support future ITU-R recommendations for THz channels under snowfall.

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