Modeling and investigation on the performance enhancement of hovering UAV-based FSO relay optical wireless communication systems under pointing errors and atmospheric turbulence effects

This paper investigates and enhances unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) relay-assisted free-space optics (FSO) optical wireless communication (OWC) systems under the effects of pointing errors (PEs) and atmospheric turbulences (ATs). The incorporation of UAVs as buffer-aided moving relays in the conventional FSO (CFSO) relay-assisted systems is proposed for enhancing the performance of PEs through AT. Using M-PSK (phase shift keying) and M-QAM (quadrature amplitude modulation), the impact of PEs on transmission quality is evaluated in this work. We evaluate and optimize the symbol error rate, outage probability (OP), and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the UAV-to-ground station-based FSO communications systems. The spatial diversity-based relay-assisted CFSO systems can enhance the performance of the UAV-UAV FSO links. In this paper, a new FSO (NFSO) channel model for the hovering UAV-FSO OWC fluctuations under the PEs, AT effects, jitter, deviation, receiving an error, and wind resistance effects are established. To improve the performance of hovering UAV-based FSO relay OWC systems. We reduce the influence of UAV-FSO OWC fluctuations under PEs and AT effects. By receiving incoherent signals at various locations, the spatial diversity-based relay-assisted NFSO systems can significantly increase the system's redundancy and enhance connection stability. Numerical results show that to achieve a bit-error-rate (BER) of ≤10-5\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$\le 10^{ - 5}$$\end{document}, the required SNR is ≥ 23 dB when the wind variance of the UAVs σα2\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$\sigma_{\alpha }^{2}$$\end{document} increases from 0 to 7 mrad with FSO link distance L = 2000 m. The required SNR is ≥ 25 dB when the wind variance σα2\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$\sigma_{\alpha }^{2}$$\end{document} is 1 mrad at an OP of 10-6\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$10^{ - 6}$$\end{document}. To obtain an average BER of 10-6\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$10^{ - 6}$$\end{document}, the SNR should be 16.23 dB, 17.64 dB, and 21.45 dB when σα2\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$\sigma_{\alpha }^{2}$$\end{document} is 0 mrad, 1 mrad, and 2 mrad, respectively. Using 8-PSK modulation without PEs requires 23.5 dB at BER of 10-8\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$10^{ - 8}$$\end{document} while 16-QAM without PEs requires 26.5 dB to maintain the same BER of 10-8\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$10^{ - 8}$$\end{document}. Compared with 16-QAM without PEs, the SNR gain of 8-PSK without PEs is 3 dB. The results show the relay-assisted UAV-FSO system with five stationary relays can achieve BER 10-8\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$10^{ - 8}$$\end{document} at 25 dB SNR in the ideal case and 10-5\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$$10^{ - 5}$$\end{document} at 27 dB SNR with AT and PE at FSO length 1000 m. The results show the relay UAV-FSO system outperforms the CFSO at the BER and SNR performance. The effects of UAV’FSO s fluctuation increase when the UAV-FSO link length, Lfso\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$${\text{L}}_{{{\text{fso}}}}$$\end{document} increases. The results of the weak turbulence achieve better SER compared with MT and ST. The obtained results show that decreasing Lfso\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$${\text{L}}_{{{\text{fso}}}}$$\end{document} can compensate for the effects of UAV-FSO link fluctuation on the proposed system. Finally, we investigated the CFSO relay-assisted UAV-FSO system with aided NFSO-UAVs spatial diversity-based relay-based on NFSO OWC and revealed the benefits of the resulting hybrid architecture.


Introduction
The crucial advantages of free-space optics (FSO) communication technology, such as its high transmission capacity, extensive spectrum resources, superior confidentiality, and good directivity, have led to its widespread use in both the commercial and military sectors (Alzenad et al. 2018;Ghassemlooy et al. 2019;Khalighi and Uysal 2014). In addition, as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) steadily expand from the military to the commercial and civil sectors, high-speed data transmission is frequently required in several specialized working environments, such as terrain survey and catastrophe detection. FSO communication technology is implemented in the field of UAV to provide high data rate optical network infrastructure in ground-to-ground and air-to-air scenarios (Khalighi and Uysal 2014). The FSO communication link between UAVs is essential for increasing their networking flexibility and coverage area. Recently, long-range wireless communications between two terrestrial stations have frequently been supported by UAVs and high-altitude platforms as relays (Michailidis et al. 2018;Fawaz et al. 2018). A depth discussion of the UAV FSO communication channel modeling can be found in Cruz and Fierro (2015); Dautov et al. 2018;Zheng et al. 2021). The use of wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) can expand transmission capabilities and applications for long-distance data transfer, hence increasing the optical wireless communication (OWC) capacity. High channel capacity is provided by dense-WDM (DWDM), which multiplexes several optical carrier signals into one communication channel Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Ciaramella et al. 2009). The most often used wavelength range for data transfers up to terabits per second is the optical C-band from (1530-1565 nm) (Ciaramella et al. 2009). FSO communication links are easy to deploy, high-bandwidth, cost-effective, license-free, and secure access technology (Zhang et al. 2021;Fotouhi et al. 2019;Elsayed et al. 2022). The front-hauling transfer of multimedia data collected by flying UAVs from the central position could be replaced by FSO communication (Alzenad et al. 2018;Zheng et al. 2021;Najafi et al. 2020;Kurt et al. 2021). However, the FSO link suffers from pressure and temperature fluctuations due to atmospheric turbulence (AT). FSO is additionally impacted by beam spreading losses, amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise, pointing errors (PEs), AT, misalignment, absorption, scattering, scintillation, inter-channel crosstalk (ICC), and power penalty (PP) Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Ciaramella et al. 2009). Techniques for minimizing ASE, AT, PP, ICC, and scintillation include adaptive multiple-input and multiple-output (MIMO) methods Elsayed and Yousif 2020) and wave-front sensor-based or sensorless adaptive optics systems. Recently, OWC systems and outdoor FSO systems have been developed and implemented with spatial modulation (SM) diversity-based MIMO systems technology . FSO systems employing DWDM with multiple channels support a greater capacity reach (32 channels × 40 Gbps) and are a simple way to enhance the data rate in the longhaul FSO data transfer Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Ciaramella et al. 2009). A closed-form statistical channel model has been proposed that takes into account such as the AT intensity, field angle, spatial information, PE variation, and transmit power. It requires a minimal set of UAV communication standard operations. To enhance communication quality, these parameters have been optimized (Zheng et al. 2021;Dabiri et al. 2018Dabiri et al. , 2019. A replaceable lens array has been used to modify the transmitter's beam divergence mechanism to increase the link's stability. (Dautov et al. 2018;Zheng et al. 2021). Previous studies focused on the communication between hovering UAVs and ignored the impact of instabilities and wind resistance. Only jitter and angle deviation will be affected by the UAV FSO communication in hovering modes (Najafi et al. 2020;Dabiri et al. 2018). In this paper, we analyze and investigate the performance enhancement of hovering UAV-based FSO relay optical wireless communication systems under PEs and AT effects. The proposed techniques for minimizing ASE, AT, PP, ICC, and scintillation using adaptive UAV-FSO MIMO methods and wave-front sensor-based or sensorless adaptive optics systems are investigated. In this paper, a new FSO (NFSO) communication channel model for the hovering UAV-FSO OWC fluctuations under the PEs, AT effects, jitter, deviation, receiving an error, and wind resistance effects are established. To improve the performance of hovering UAV-based FSO relay OWC systems. We reduce the influence of UAV-FSO OWC fluctuations under PEs and AT effects. By receiving incoherent signals at various locations, the spatial diversity-based relayassisted NFSO systems can significantly increase the system's redundancy and enhance connection stability. We analyzed and derived the symbol error rate (SER) performance, taking into accounts such as link loss, transmitted power, total noise of the APD, various AT conditions, and PE loss. The rest of this article is structured as follows: Sect. 2 discusses the model and analysis of the UAV-FSO OWC communication system under the effects of PEs and AT. The SER is analyzed and derived in Sect. 3. The numerical results and discussion of the UAV-FSO communication link are presented in Sect. 4. This article is concluded in Sect. 5.

Analysis of UAV-FSO optical wireless communication link with pointing errors and atmospheric turbulence
When the UAV at the receiving end is flying horizontally, the arrival angle between the centerline of the beam and the receiving plane is not only influenced by the pointing deviation brought on by the jitter of the receiving end but also needs to take the tilt angle of the receiving plane into account (Zheng et al. 2021). Figure 1 shows the schematic diagram of the reception plane at the receiving end UAV which was reproduced from Zheng et al. (2021). The received signal at the receiving end of a wireless optical communication link can be expressed as (Zheng et al. 2021;Najafi et al. 2020): where n is the additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN), and x is the signal generated at the transmitting end. The following equation can provide h, the channel coefficient: (1) y = hx + n where h t is the atmospheric channel's attenuation and AT coefficient for the position deviation of the transceiver in the hovering UAV-based FSO wireless communications and h a represents the link interrupt coefficient, which denotes whether the spot is detected on the detection plane. h g is the geometric and PE deviation coefficient, which denotes the position deviation between the spot center and the lens center at the receiving end. The Gamma-Gamma (GG) model and probability distribution function (PDF) of the log-normal (LN) (2) h = h t h a h g Fig. 1 System model at the 3D receiving plane end UAV-FSO relay-assisted free-space optical wireless systems for a FSO Tx (transmitter) and FSO receiver (RX) under the atmospheric turbulence effects reprinted from (Zheng et al. 2021), b for the received beam at the FSO Rx station under the atmospheric turbulence and pointing error in the presence of UAV-FSO fluctuations, reproduced from (Zheng et al. 2021;Trung 2021) channels can be used to characterize the proposed system. The GG distribution of h t in terms of the attenuation of the optical signal caused by air turbulence Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Andrews and Phillips 2012;Majumdar 2005;Khalighi et al. 2009;Aladeloba et al. 2012;Hayal et al. 2021): where Γ(⋅) is the Gamma function, k n (⋅) is the nth order modified second kind of Bessel function. and indicate the effective numbers of the large-scale and small-scale eddies, respectively Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Andrews and Phillips 2012;Majumdar 2005;Khalighi et al. 2009;Aladeloba et al. 2012;Hayal et al. 2021): where the Rytov variance is expressed as: where k is the wave number, C 2 n is the atmospheric refractive index structural (ARIS) parameter Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Andrews and Phillips 2012;Majumdar 2005;Khalighi et al. 2009;Aladeloba et al. 2012;Hayal et al. 2021), and L is the FSO distance Elsayed and Yousif 2020;Elsayed et al. 2018;Andrews and Phillips 2012;Majumdar 2005;Khalighi et al. 2009;Aladeloba et al. 2012;Hayal et al. 2021). The GG model's atmospheric turbulence is simulated in this work using the phase screen approach (Andrews and Phillips 2012;Majumdar 2005;Khalighi et al. 2009;Aladeloba et al. 2012;Hayal et al. 2021;Whitfield et al. 2012;Chatterjee and Mohamed 2014;Gudimetla et al. 2011). A small tilt will be present between the fuselage and the y-axis when a multi-rotor UAV is flying in a straight and horizontal trajectory, as seen in Fig. 1a (Zheng et al. 2021). The tilt angle influences the performance of the link through the coefficient h a , which is related to the UAV's speed (Zheng et al. 2021). As seen in Fig. 1a, the included angle between the central axis and the y-axis is indicated as φ, assuming that the UAV at the receiving end is flying horizontally (Trung 2021;Trung and Tuan 2014;Ai et al. 2020). Figure 1b shows the Rx lens accumulates the transmitted optical beam (Tx), which is projected onto the receiver (Rx) plane's surface. The incoming optical signal then converges onto the surface of the APD's area (Trung 2021). Addition to the optical signal, the thermal noise, and the background noise is also added to the receiver (Trung 2021). The expression for a in the horizontal flying state is a = − . The link will thus be interrupted when it crosses the receiver's field of view (FOV). The PDF of a is given by Zheng et al. (2021) where tx and rx represent the x-direction angle deviations of the transmitting and receiving ends, respectively, and ty and ry represent the y-direction angle deviations of the transmitting and receiving ends, respectively. The PDF of t can be written as (Zheng et al. 2021;Dabiri et al. 2019): where r d r = x r + y r is the receiving end's position deviation, r d t = x t + y t is the transmitting end's position deviation, Z is the z-plane transmission distance, and ̂t =̂t x +̂t y is the transmitting end's angle deviation. r d conditioned on Rician distribution for ̂t x and ̂t y . Therefore, the geometric and PE coefficients can be expressed as (Zheng et al. 2021;Trung 2021;Trung and Tuan 2014;Ai et al. 2020): where A 0 = erfc( ) 2 represents the lens's energy-to-total energy ratio when r d = 0. Using the avalanche photodiode (APD) or PIN photodetectors (PDs), the Rx lens collects the zeq received beam onto the PD area. The equivalent beam waist can be calculated as (Zheng et al. 2021;Trung 2021;Trung and Tuan 2014;Ai et al. 2020) where erfc (⋅) is the error function and = √ a∕ √ 2 z . ζ = 1∕cos , z is the beam waist of distance Z, and a is the Rx lens radius. The PDF of h conditioned on t can be expressed as (Zheng et al. 2021). where h th is the channel coefficient threshold of h. The link outage can be taken into consideration when the instantaneous channel coefficient is lower than h th . Equation (17) where g is the transmitter's signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the complementary error function is erfc (). In order to account for the aiming inaccuracy and fluctuations from the FSO Tx installed on the UAV to the FSO Rx, we calculate the SER in the weak turbulence (WT), moderate turbulence (MT), and strong turbulence (ST) channels. The generalized average SER expression for assessing the UAV-based FSO system considering the LN and GG fading channels is given by Trung (2021) where P e (h) represents the conditional error probability (CEP) and f h (h) is the PDF of SNR, h. By employing a general M I × M Q -quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) constellation with two independents M I in-phase and M Q quadrature signal amplitudes, the CEP is given by Trung (2021) where The SER is then calculated by Page 9 of 23 625

SER calculation of WT to MT turbulence
The PDF of LN channels can be expressed for WT to MT turbulence (Zheng et al. 2021;Trung 2021;Trung and Tuan 2014;Ai et al. 2020) where R and G denote the APD responsivity and the average gain, respectively. n is the thermal variance, m , and P t are the modulation index and average transmitted power per symbol, respectively. (24) 625 Page 10 of 23

Numerical results and discussion
In this section, the FSO communication link is simulated when the receiving UAV is in straight-flight mode. The UAV-FSO relay-assisted system parameters utilized in the calculations are shown in Table 1. The proposed model is implemented under the MATLAB software platform. The Monte Carlo simulation is used to model the probability of different results and the accuracy of the simulated data. By considering the angle pointing deviation and position deviation produced by the UAV jitter, the effect of the UAV's fuselage tilt angle in horizontal and straight flights on the communication quality is examined. The following initial settings have been made: a wavelength of 1550 nm, a beam waist of 5 mm, a radius of 0.1 m for the receiver aperture, and a maximum UAV-FSO transmission range of L fso = 2 km . The power spectral density function is simulated using the Modified Von Karman model, where the transmission rate of the QSPK signal is 20 Gb/s and ARIS C 2 n = 1 × 10 −13 m −2∕3 for ST , 5 × 10 −15 m −2∕3 for MT , and 1 × 10 −17 m −2∕3 for WT . The values of 2 r 0 = 2 t 0 = 1 mrad and the tilt angles of the fuselage as 0, 5, 10, 20, and 25 mrad, respectively, were used in the simulation. As observed in Fig. 2, the tilt angle of the fuselage has a greater impact on the communication quality of UAVs than does the jitter induced by the wind resistance. In Fig. 2, the OP increases the UAVs-FSO communication with the increase of the random wind resistance and the PE with AT. The OP increases to 10 −4 at a SNR of 25 dB when 2 increases from 0 to 7 mrad. When 2 increases from 0 to 7 mrad at the OP of 10 −4 , the SNR should be increased from 17 dB to more than 25 dB. The required SNR is ≥ 25 dB when the variance of the wind 2 is 1 mrad at an OP of 10 −6 . In Fig. 3, the average BER (ABER) will also increase when 2 increases. The ABER will increase from 10 −7 to 3.38 × 10 −5 at the SNR of 23 dB, when 2 increases from 0 to 7 mrad. With the ABER of 10 −6 , the SNR should be 16.23 dB, 17.64 dB, and 21.45 dB when 2 is 0 mrad, 1 mrad, and 2 mrad, respectively. With the ABER is 10 −5 and 2 is 5 mrad, the (29) σ 2 n = σ 2 bg + σ 2 th + σ 2 s ,    Fig. 4 about the average SNR for 8-PSK and 16-QAM, with/without PE. The simulation was performed to verify the analytical expressions. The system included WT to MT atmospheric turbulence conditions from and the FSO link distance L = 1000 m. As can be observed, the SER with PE is much worse than when there isn't PE. On the other hand, using a high-order modulation method causes the SER to be less than desired. Using 8-PSK modulation without PE requires 23.5 dB at BER of 10 −8 while 16-QAM without PE requires 26.5 dB to maintain the same BER of 10 −8 . Compared with 16-QAM without PEs, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) gain of 8-PSK without PE is 3 dB. The SNR power penalty is 3 dB at BER of 10 −8 .
When the BER is 10 −4 , the 8-PSK with PE needs 22.69 dB at BER while the 16-QAM with PE needs 26.28 to maintain the same BER. The SNR power penalty is 3.59 dB. When BER is 10 −4 , compared to the 16-QAM scheme with a PE, the SNR gain of the 8-PSK scheme with a PE is 3.59 dB. At the target BER = 10 −3 , the 8-PSK without PE requires 13.50 dB while the 16-QAM scheme without PE requires 15.50 dB. So, the 8-PSK scheme without PE can achieve a 2 dB power gain compared with the 16-QAM scheme without PE. At the target BER = 10 −3 , the 8-PSK with PE requires 20.37 dB while the 16-QAM scheme with PE requires 24.12 dB. So, the 8-PSK scheme with PE can be achieved a 3.75 dB power gain compared with the 16-QAM scheme with PE. Figure 5 shows the SER versus APD gain for various ARIS C 2 n in the WT, MT, and ST at L of 1000 m. In the WT at C 2 n = 1 × 10 −17 m −2∕3 , the SER performance improves and reaches to 10 −11 while in the MT, the SER is at 10 −6 and in the ST, the SER decreases to 10 −5 . Therefore, the turbulence strength influences how well the SER performs. When the atmospheric turbulence increases, the SER decrease. It is observed that weather-related turbulence conditions significantly impact SER performance (El-Mottaleb et al. 2021;El-Fikky et al. 2020). Additionally, as the APD's gain is raised, the noise variances are caused by the desired received signal of 2 rise as well. Figure 6 shows the OP versus SNR for a traditional relay-assisted system with four stationary relays. The simulation results confirm the enormous potential of buffer-aided relays to improve OP performance, particularly in both medium and high SNR regimes (Fawaz For instance, with an SNR of 20 dB, an OP of around 10 −7 is seen compared to 10 −1 for the conventional system. Since a good channel quality would enable the transmission of several packets from the UAVs' buffers to the target. As a result, this enhances the OP of the FSO system (Fawaz et al. 2018). Figure 6 shows the performance of the UAV-FSO system compared with a conventional FSO (CFSO) system. The OP in the CFSO of 10 −1 while using a UAV-FSO system with four relays, the OP can reach 10 −7 . Using relay UAV-FSO, we achieve high SNR at 20 dB at the OP of 10 −7 . The UAV-FSO system with a UAV altitude of 250 m can reach 3.7 × 10 −7 while with a UAV altitude of 500 m, achieve OP of 10 −6 . When the UAV altitude increase, the OP increase. The UAV-FSO system performance with four stationary relays can achieve better OP and SNR. The results show the relay-assisted. UAV-FSO system with four stationary relays can achieve better BER performance of 10 −6 at 20 dB SNR, while the CFSO can achieve BER of 10 −1 at 20 dB SNR. The BER of a CFSO relay-assisted FSO system and a UAV-FSO system with five stationary relays are compared in Fig. 7. In terms of packet delivery, the results demonstrate that a moving buffer-aided relay performs better than a stationary buffer-free relay. The results show a steady improvement over the CFSO system in terms of OP. It can be seen that AT and PEs affect the BER with different severity. For example, heavy weather turbulence degrades the SNR and raises the BER (El-Mottaleb et al. 2021;El-Fikky et al. 2020). As far as AT and PEs are concerned, they affect BER equally. Here, the SNR increases in the ideal situation without AT but falls with an increase in PE and AT. The BER performance is also enhanced. The results show the relay-assisted UAV-FSO system with five stationary relays can achieve BER 10 −8 at 25 dB SNR in the ideal case and 10 −5 at 27 dB SNR with AT and PE at an FSO length 1000 m. The results show the relay UAV-FSO system outperforms the CFSO at the BER and SNR performance. compared with MT and ST. The obtained results show that decreasing L fso can compensate for the effects of UAV-FSO link fluctuation on the proposed system (Trung 2021). Figure 9 shows the comparison between the atmospheric turbulence transmission with pointing error (PE) and without PE for BER versus the average transmitted power per symbol P t , for different turbulence strengths C 2 n (m −2∕3 ) at L fso = 2 km. The numerical results show that the required P t to obtain BER of 10 −9 are − 12.7 dBm, − 10.8 dBm, and − 10 dBm corresponding to C 2 n = 1 × 10 −17 m −2∕3 , C 2 n = 5 × 10 −15 m −2∕3 , and C 2 n = 1 × 10 −13 m −2∕3 for hovering UAV-FSO without PE, respectively . Without PE, the BER performance is significantly improved compared to in the presence of PE. The required P t to obtain BER of 10 −9 are − 9.2 dBm, − 8 dBm, and − 6.8 dBm corresponding to C 2 n = 1 × 10 −17 m −2∕3 , C 2 n = 5 × 10 −15 m −2∕3 , and C 2 n = 1 × 10 −13 m −2∕3 for hovering UAV-FSO with PE, respectively. The performance improvements without PE are 3.5 dB, 2.8 dB, and 3.2 dB for C 2 n = 1 × 10 −17 m −2∕3 , C 2 n = 5 × 10 −15 m −2∕3 , and C 2 n = 1 × 10 −13 m −2∕3 , respectively.

Conclusion
In this paper, a new FSO communication channel model for the hovering UAV-FSO OWC fluctuations under the PEs, AT effects, jitter, deviation, receiving an error, and wind resistance effects is established. To improve the performance of hovering UAVbased FSO relay OWC systems. We reduce the influence of UAV-FSO OWC fluctuations under PEs and AT effects. By receiving incoherent signals at various locations, the spatial diversity-based relay-assisted NFSO systems can significantly increase the system's redundancy and enhance connection stability. A UAV-FSO communication channel model has been investigated using different performance metrics. Along with the air turbulence and the jitter, the UAV suffers due to its engine vibration; the tilt angle and the horizontal lateral wind resistance generated by the UAV's various motion states have also been considered. The system's SER analysis was derived using multiple parameters, linking AT and the PE effect. Then, we investigated and improved the performance of the considered system's relay-assisted UAV-FSO over different channel parameters due to UAV fluctuations. The required SNR to attain a BER of 10 -5 is 23 dB when the tilt angle of the UAVs 2 increases from 0 to 7 mrad with FSO link distance L = 2000 m. To obtain ABER of 10 −6 , the SNR should be 16.23 dB, 17.64 dB, and 21.45 dB when 2 is 0 mrad, 1 mrad, and 2 mrad, respectively. The average BER will also increase when 2 increases. The ABER will increase from 10 −7 to 3.38 × 10 −5 at the SNR of 23 dB, when 2 increases from 0 to 7 mrad. With the ABER of 10 −6 , the SNR should be 16.23 dB, 17.64 dB, and 21.45 dB when 2 is 0 mrad, 1 mrad, and 2 mrad, respectively. With the ABER is 10 −5 and 2 is 5 mrad, the SNR reaches 18.77 dB while when 2 is 7 mrad, the ABER is 10 −4 and the SNR is 10.05 dB. The SER performance improves and reaches to 10 −11 while in the MT, the SER is at 10 −6 and in the ST, the SER decreases to 10 −5 . Therefore, the turbulence strength influences how well the SER performs. The OP in the CFSO of 10 −1 while using a UAV-FSO system with four relays, the OP can reach 10 −7 . Using relay UAV-FSO, we achieve high SNR at 20 dB at the OP of 10 −7 . The UAV-FSO system with a UAV altitude of 250 m can reach 3.7 × 10 −7 while with a UAV altitude of 500 m, achieve OP of 10 −6 . When the UAV altitude increase, the OP increase. The UAV-FSO system performance with four stationary relays can achieve better OP and SNR. The results show the relay-assisted UAV-FSO system with five stationary relays can achieve BER 10 −8 at 25 dB SNR in the ideal case and 10 −5 at 27 dB SNR with AT and PE at FSO length 1000 m. The results show