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These days, cell phones
provide an incredible array of functions, and new ones are being added at a
breakneck pace. Depending on the cell-phone model, you can:
But have you ever wondered how a cell phone works? What makes it
different from a regular phone? What do all those terms like PCS, GSM, CDMA
and TDMA mean? In this article, we will discuss the technology behind cell
phones so that you can see how amazing they really are. One of the most
interesting things about a cell phone is that it is actually a radio --
an extremely sophisticated radio, but a radio nonetheless. The telephone
was invented by Alexander Graham Bell in 1876, and
wireless communication can trace its roots to the invention of the radio by
Nikolai Tesla in the 1880s (formally presented in 1894 by a young Italian
named Guglielmo Marconi). It was only natural that
these two great technologies would eventually be combined. In the dark ages
before cell phones, people who really needed mobile-communications ability
installed radio telephones in their cars. In the radio-telephone
system, there was one central antenna tower per city, and perhaps 25
channels available on that tower. This central antenna meant that
the phone in your car needed a powerful transmitter -- big enough to transmit
40 or 50 miles (about 70 km). It also meant that not many people could use
radio telephones -- there just were not enough channels. The genius of the
cellular system is the division of a city into small cells. This
allows extensive frequency reuse across a city, so that millions of
people can use cell phones simultaneously. A good way to
understand the sophistication of a cell phone is to compare it to a CB radio
or a walkie-talkie.
Range - A walkie-talkie can
transmit about 1 mile (1.6 km) using a 0.25-watt transmitter. A CB radio,
because it has much higher power, can transmit about 5 miles (8 km) using a
5-watt transmitter. Cell phones operate within cells, and they can
switch cells as they move around. Cells give cell phones incredible range.
Someone using a cell phone can drive hundreds of miles and maintain a
conversation the entire time because of the cellular approach. In a typical
analog cell-phone system in the
Each cell has a base
station that consists of a tower and a small building containing the
radio equipment (more on base stations later). A single cell in an
analog system uses one-seventh of the available duplex voice channels. That is, each cell (of the seven on a hexagonal grid) is
using one-seventh of the available channels so it has a unique set of
frequencies and there are no collisions:
In other words, in any
cell, 56 people can be talking on their cell phone at one time. Analog cellular
systems are considered first-generation mobile technology, or 1G. With
digital transmission methods (2G), the number of available channels
increases. For example, a TDMA-based digital system can carry three
times as many calls as an analog system, so each cell has about 168 channels available . Cell phones have low-power transmitters
in them. Many cell phones have two signal strengths: 0.6 watts and 3 watts
(for comparison, most CB radios transmit at 4 watts). The base station is
also transmitting at low power. Low-power transmitters have two advantages:
The cellular approach requires a large number of base stations
in a city of any size. A typical large city can have hundreds of towers.
But because so many people are using cell phones, costs remain low per user.
Each carrier in each city also runs one central office called the Mobile
Telephone Switching Office (MTSO). This office handles all of the phone
connections to the normal land-based phone system, and controls all of the
base stations in the region. |
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Cell Phone Codes
All cell phones have special codes associated with them.
These codes are used to identify the phone, the phone's owner and the service
provider. Let's say you have a
cell phone, you turn it on and someone tries to call you. Here is what
happens to the call:
As you travel, the
signal is passed from cell to cell. Let's say you're on
the phone and you move from one cell to another -- but the cell you move into
is covered by another service provider, not yours. Instead of dropping the
call, it'll actually be handed off to the other service provider. If the SID on the
control channel does not match the SID programmed into your phone, then the
phone knows it is roaming. The MTSO of the cell that you are roaming
in contacts the MTSO of your home system, which then checks its database to confirm
that the SID of the phone you are using is valid.
Your home system verifies your phone to the local MTSO, which then
tracks your phone as you move through its cells. And the amazing thing is
that all of this happens within seconds. The less amazing thing
is that you may be charged insane rates for your roaming call. On most
phones, the word "roam" will come up on your phone's screen when
you leave your provider's coverage area and enter another's. If not, you'd
better study your coverage maps carefully -- more than one person has been
unpleasantly surprised by the cost of roaming. Check your service contract
carefully to find out how much you're paying when you roam. Note that if you want
to roam internationally, you'll need a phone that will work both at home and
abroad. Different countries use different cellular access technologies. Let's
take a good look inside a digital cell phone. Inside a Cell Phone
If you take a cell
phone apart, you find that it contains just a few individual parts:
The microprocessor handles all of the
housekeeping chores for the keyboard and display, deals with command and
control signaling with the base station and also coordinates the rest of the
functions on the board. The ROM and Flash
memory
chips provide storage for the phone's operating system and
customizable features, such as the phone directory. The radio frequency
(RF) and power section handles
power management and recharging, and also deals with the hundreds of FM channels.
Finally, the RF amplifiers handle signals traveling to and from the
antenna. The display has grown
considerably in size as the number of features in cell
phones have increased. Most current phones offer built-in phone
directories, calculators and games. And many of the phones incorporate some
type of PDA or Web
browser. Some phones store
certain information, such as the SID and MIN codes, in internal Flash memory,
while others use external cards that are similar to SmartMedia cards. Cell phones have such
tiny speakers and microphones that it is incredible how well most of them
reproduce sound. As you can see in the picture above, the speaker is about
the size of a dime and the microphone is no larger than the watch battery
beside it. Speaking of the watch battery, this is used by the cell phone's internal
clock chip. What is amazing is
that all of that functionality -- which only 30 years ago would have filled
an entire floor of an office building -- now fits into a package that sits
comfortably in the palm of your hand!
In 1983, the analog
cell-phone standard called AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone System) was
approved by the FCC and first used in Carriers A and B are each assigned 832 frequencies: 790 for voice
and 42 for data. A pair of frequencies (one for transmit and one for receive)
is used to create one channel. The frequencies used in analog voice
channels are typically 30 kHz wide -- 30 kHz was chosen as the
standard size because it gives you voice quality comparable to a wired telephone. The
transmit and receive frequencies of each voice channel are separated by 45
MHz to keep them from interfering with each other. Each carrier has 395
voice channels, as well as 21 data channels to use for housekeeping
activities like registration and paging. A version of AMPS
known as Narrowband Advanced Mobile Phone Service (NAMPS) incorporates
some digital technology to allow the system to carry about three times as
many calls as the original version. Even though it uses digital
technology, it is still considered analog. AMPS and NAMPS only operate in the
800-MHz band and do not offer many of the features common in digital cellular
service, such as e-mail and Web browsing. |
Along Comes Digital
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Digital cell phones are the second generation (2G) of cellular
technology. They use the same radio technology as analog phones, but they use
it in a different way. Analog systems do not fully utilize the signal between
the phone and the cellular network -- analog signals cannot be compressed and
manipulated as easily as a true digital signal. This is the reason why many cable companies
are switching to digital -- so they can fit more channels within a given
bandwidth. It is amazing how much more efficient digital systems can be. Digital phones convert
your voice into binary information (1s and 0s) and then compress it (see How
Analog-Digital Recording Works for details on the
conversion process). This compression allows between three and 10
digital cell-phone calls to occupy the space of a single analog call. Many digital cellular
systems rely on frequency-shift keying (FSK) to send data back and
forth over AMPS. FSK uses two frequencies, one for 1s and the other
for 0s, alternating rapidly between the two to send digital
information between the cell tower and the phone. Clever modulation and
encoding schemes are required to convert the analog information to digital,
compress it and convert it back again while maintaining an acceptable level
of voice quality. All of this means that digital cell phones have to contain
a lot of processing power. There are three common
technologies used by 2G cell-phone networks for transmitting information
(we'll discuss 3G technologies in the 3G section):
Although these technologies sound very intimidating, you can get
a good sense of how they work just by breaking down the title of each one. The first word tells
you what the access method is. The second word, division, lets
you know that it splits calls based on that access method.
The last part of each name is multiple access.
This simply means that more than one user can utilize each cell. FDMA
TDMA Narrow band means
"channels" in the traditional sense. Each conversation gets the
radio for one-third of the time. This is possible because voice data that has
been converted to digital information is compressed so that it takes up
significantly less transmission space. Therefore, TDMA has three times the
capacity of an analog system using the same number of channels. TDMA
systems operate in either the 800-MHz (IS-54) or 1900-MHz
(IS-136) frequency bands. GSM
TDMA is also used as
the access technology for Global System for GSM is the
international standard in Europe, Unfortunately, the
850MHz/1900-MHz GSM phones used in the CDMA takes an entirely
different approach from TDMA. CDMA, after digitizing data, spreads it out
over the entire available bandwidth. Multiple calls are overlaid on
each other on the channel, with each assigned a unique sequence code.
CDMA is a form of spread
spectrum, which simply means that data is sent in small pieces over a number
of the discrete frequencies available for use at any time in the specified
range. All of the users
transmit in the same wide-band chunk of spectrum. Each user's signal
is spread over the entire bandwidth by a unique spreading code. At the
receiver, that same unique code is used to recover the signal. Because CDMA
systems need to put an accurate time-stamp on each piece of a signal, it
references the GPS system for this
information. Between eight and 10 separate calls can be carried in the same
channel space as one analog AMPS call. CDMA technology is the basis for Interim
Standard 95 (IS-95) and operates in both the 800-MHz and 1900-MHz
frequency bands. Ideally, TDMA and CDMA
are transparent to each other. In practice, high-power CDMA signals raise the
noise floor for TDMA receivers, and high-power TDMA signals can cause
overloading and jamming of CDMA receivers. |
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