Allocations

 
U.S. Non-Federal-Government Allocations
94.1 - 95 GHz
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION


U.S. Federal Government Allocations
94.1 - 95 GHz
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION


ITU Region 1 Allocations
94.1 - 95 GHz
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION


ITU Region 2 Allocations
94.1 - 95 GHz
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION


ITU Region 3 Allocations
94.1 - 95 GHz
FIXED
MOBILE
RADIO ASTRONOMY
RADIOLOCATION


SpectrumWiki

Band Uses (94.1 - 95 GHz)

Footnotes


5.149   In making assignments to stations of other services to which the bands:
13 360-13 410 kHz,
25 550-25 670 kHz,
37.5-38.25 MHz,
73-74.6 MHz in Regions 1 and 3,
150.05-153 MHz in Region 1,
322-328.6 MHz,
406.1-410 MHz,
608-614 MHz in Regions 1 and 3,
1 330-1 400 MHz,
1 610.6-1 613.8 MHz,
1 660-1 670 MHz,
1 718.8-1 722.2 MHz,
2 655-2 690 MHz,
3 260-3 267 MHz,
3 332-3 339 MHz,
3 345.8-3 352.5 MHz,
4 825-4 835 MHz, 4 950-4 990 MHz,
4 990-5 000 MHz,
6 650-6 675.2 MHz,
10.6-10.68 GHz,
14.47-14.5 GHz,
22.01-22.21 GHz,
22.21-22.5 GHz,
22.81-22.86 GHz,
23.07-23.12 GHz,
31.2-31.3 GHz,
31.5-31.8 GHz in Regions 1 and 3,
36.43-36.5 GHz,
42.5-43.5 GHz,
48.94-49.04 GHz,
76-86 GHz,
92-94 GHz,
94.1-100 GHz, 102-109.5 GHz,
111.8-114.25 GHz,
128.33-128.59 GHz,
129.23-129.49 GHz,
130-134 GHz,
136-148.5 GHz,
151.5-158.5 GHz,
168.59-168.93 GHz,
171.11-171.45 GHz,
172.31-172.65 GHz,
173.52-173.85 GHz,
195.75-196.15 GHz,
209-226 GHz,
241-250 GHz,
252-275 GHz
are allocated, administrations are urged to take all practicable steps to protect the radio astronomy service from harmful interference. Emissions from spaceborne or airborne stations can be particularly serious sources of interference to the radio astronomy service (see Nos. 4.5 and 4.6 and Article 29). (WRC 07)



US161    In the bands 81-86 GHz, 92-94 GHz, and 94.1-95 GHz and within the coordination distances indicated below, assignments to allocated services shall be coordinated with the following radio astronomy observatories. New observatories shall not receive protection from fixed stations that are licensed to operate in the one hundred most populous urbanized areas as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau for the year 2000.

    (a) Within 25 km of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory’s (NRAO’s) Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) Stations:

StateVLBA StationLat. (N)Long. (W)
AZKitt Peak31° 57` 23"111° 36` 45"
CAOwens Valley37° 13` 54"118° 16` 37"
HIMauna Kea19° 48` 05"155° 27` 20"
IANorth Liberty41° 46` 17"091° 34` 27"
NHHancock42° 56` 01"071° 59` 12"
NMLos Alamos35° 46` 30"106° 14` 44"
NMPie Town34° 18` 04"108° 07` 09"
TXFort Davis30° 38` 06"103° 56` 41"
VISaint Croix17° 45` 24"064° 35` 01"
WABrewster48° 07` 52"119° 41` 00"

    (b) Within 150 km of the following observatories:

StateTelescope and siteLat. (N)Long. (W)
AZHeinrich Hertz Submillimeter Observatory, Mt. Graham32° 42` 06"109° 53` 28"
AZUniversity of Arizona 12-m Telescope, Kitt Peak31° 57` 12"111° 36` 53"
CACaltech Telescope, Owens Valley37° 13` 54"118° 17` 36"
CACombined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy (CARMA)37° 16` 43"118° 08` 32"
HIJames Clerk Maxwell Telescope, Mauna Kea19° 49` 33"155° 28` 47"
MAHaystack Observatory, Westford42° 37` 24"071° 29` 18"
NMNRAO’s Very Large Array, Socorro34° 04` 44"107° 37` 06"
WVNRAO’s Robert C. Byrd Telescope, Green Bank38° 25` 59"079° 50` 23"

    Note: Satisfactory completion of the coordination procedure utilizing the automated mechanism, see 47 CFR 101.1523, will be deemed to establish sufficient separation from radio astronomy observatories, regardless of whether the distances set forth above are met.

US342   In making assignments to stations of other services to which the bands:

13 360-13 410 kHz42.77-42.87 GHz*
25 550-25 670 kHz43.07-43.17 GHz*
37.5-38.25 MHz43.37-43.47 GHz*
322-328.6 MHz*48.94-49.04 GHz*
1330-1400 MHz*76-86 GHz
1610.6-1613.8 MHz*92-94 GHz
1660-1660.5 MHz*94.1-100 GHz
1668.4-1670 MHz*102-109.5 GHz
3260-3267 MHz*111.8-114.25 GHz
3332-3339 MHz*128.33-128.59 GHz*
3345.8-3352.5 MHz*129.23-129.49 GHz*
4825-4835 MHz*130-134 GHz
4950-4990 MHz136-148.5 GHz
6650-6675.2 MHz*151.5-158.5 GHz
14.47-14.5 GHz*168.59-168.93 GHz*
22.01-22.21 GHz*171.11-171.45 GHz*
22.21-22.5 GHz172.31-172.65 GHz*
22.81-22.86 GHz*173.52-173.85 GHz*
23.07-23.12 GHz*195.75-196.15 GHz*
31.2-31.3 GHz209-226 GHz
36.43-36.5 GHz*241-250 GHz
42.5-43.5 GHz252-275 GHz

are allocated (*indicates radio astronomy use for spectral line observations), all practicable steps shall be taken to protect the radio astronomy service from harmful interference. Emissions from spaceborne or airborne stations can be particularly serious sources of interference to the radio astronomy service (see ITU Radio Regulations at Nos. 4.5 and 4.6 and Article 29).


SpectrumWiki

 
E-band
70/80/90 GHz Bands


Related Documents, Links, and Multimedia:
FCC Proceeding (1)

Engineering Data

Lower Frequency Center Frequency Upper Frequency
Frequency 94.1 GHz 94.55 GHz 95 GHz
Wavelength 3.2 mm 3.2 mm 3.2 mm
Band designator(s) EHF (millimeter wave); W-band (IEEE) EHF (millimeter wave); W-band (IEEE) EHF (millimeter wave); W-band (IEEE)
Isotropic collecting area 0.8 mm2 0.8 mm2 0.8 mm2
Free space loss (1 m) 71.9 dB 72.0 dB 72.0 dB
Free space loss (1 km) 131.9 dB 132.0 dB 132.0 dB
Free space loss (10 km) 151.9 dB 152.0 dB 152.0 dB
Free space loss (100 km) 171.9 dB 172.0 dB 172.0 dB
Free space loss (1000 km) 191.9 dB 192.0 dB 192.0 dB
Free space loss
(35,786 km = GEO orbit)
223.0 dB 223.0 dB 223.1 dB
Free space loss (378,370 km = Moon) 243.5 dB 243.5 dB 243.6 dB
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