Towards Affordable Broadband Communication: A Quantitative Assessment of TV White Space in Tanzania

dc.creatorMatogoro, Jabhera
dc.creatorMvungi, Nerey H.
dc.creatorAnatory, Justinian
dc.creatorKarandikar, Abhay
dc.creatorSingh, Jaspreet
dc.date2017-10-03T09:44:56Z
dc.date2017-10-03T09:44:56Z
dc.date2017-09
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-27T08:53:10Z
dc.date.available2018-03-27T08:53:10Z
dc.descriptionConfrence paper
dc.descriptionA quantitative assessment of TV White Space in Tanzania was conducted to assess the level of spectrum utilization as well as a key milestone towards the use of white space for affordable broadband communication. Two approaches have been used; pollution and protection viewpoints and experimental spectrum measurements based on energy detection principle. The study focused on 470 – 694 MHz UHF spectrum band which is used for digital terrestrial television in Tanzania. It was found that, more than 120 MHz is available as white space in various locations in Tanzania when pollution and protection view point was used and about 184 MHz are available as white space in Dodoma urban using experimental spectrum measurements and almost 100% of the available frequencies are not used in Dodoma rural. Both approaches revealed that there is low spectrum utilization and therefore presents a best case towards development of dynamic spectrum access technologies in Tanzania.
dc.identifierJabhera Matogoro, Nerey H. Mvungi, Justinian Anatory, Abhay Karandikar, Jaspreet Singh, “Towards Affordable Broadband Communication: A Quantitative Assessment of TV White Space in Tanzania”, Proceedings of the 1st EAI International Conference on ICT for Development for Africa, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 25th -27th Sept. 2017
dc.identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/4577
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/4577
dc.languageen
dc.publisherEAI
dc.subjectWhite Space,
dc.subjectSpectrum Analyzer,
dc.subjectenergy detection principle,
dc.subjectdynamic spectrum access
dc.titleTowards Affordable Broadband Communication: A Quantitative Assessment of TV White Space in Tanzania
dc.typeConference Proceedings

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