Mobile Phone: Telephones or Cell Phones
Mobile Phone: Telephones or Cell Phones
PRINCIPLE:
In additional to the basic function of voice calls, most modern cell phones come
with additional functions such as web surfing, taking pictures, playing games, sending
text messages and playing music. More sophisticated smart phones can perform similar
functions of a portable computer.
Radio Waves
Cell phones transmit radio waves in all directions. The waves can be absorbed and
reflected by surrounding objects before they reach the nearest cell tower. For example,
when the phone is placed next to your head during a call, a significant portion (over half
in many cases) of the emitted energy is absorbed into your head and body. In this event,
much of the cell phone’s EMF energy is wasted and no longer available for
communication.
Antenna
Many modern smart phones also contain more than one type of antenna. In addition to
the cellular antenna, they may also have Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and/or GPS antennas.
Connectivity
In order to conserve battery life, a cell phone will vary the strength of its
transmitted signal and use only the minimum necessary to communicate with the
nearest cell tower. When your cell phone has poor connectivity, it transmits a stronger
signal in order to connect to the tower, and as a result your battery drains faster. That’s
why good connectivity not only reduces dropped calls, but also saves battery life.
Digital Signals
In the beginning, mobile phones used two whole frequencies for conversations.
However, as the number of mobile phone users grew, the mobile providers realized they
would soon run out of frequencies, so digital signals were introduced. These digitals
signals encode sound data in binary and send the data in packets, using multiple
frequencies at once. The packets are decoded and turned back into sound by the
receiving mobile phone. This allows companies to save frequency space and time.
Coverage Areas
Each mobile provider has a certain coverage area, or a grid of mobile phone
towers that have their equipment, so they can relay mobile signals. If a user steps
outside this grid, the phone will either not work or go into roaming, trying to use other
equipment from different companies instead of the original technology it was designed
for. This is one reason roaming is more expensive than regular cell phone coverage fees.
Handoff
In cellular telecommunications, the terms handover or handoff refer to the
process of transferring an ongoing call or data session from one channel
connected to the core network to another channel.
when the phone is moving away from the area covered by one cell and entering
the area covered by another cell the call is transferred to the second cell in order to
avoid call termination when the phone gets outside the range of the first cell;
when the capacity for connecting new calls of a given cell is used up and an
existing or new call from a phone, which is located in an area overlapped by another
cell, is transferred to that cell in order to free-up some capacity in the first cell for other
users, who can only be connected to that cell;
Services offered
Types
Mobile phones offering only those telephony capabilities are known as feature
phones; mobile phones which offer greatly advanced computing capabilities are
referred to as smartphones.
Operation
Mobile phones communicate with cell towers that are placed to give coverage
across a telephone service area which is divided up into 'cells'. Each cell uses a different
set of frequencies from neighbouring cells and will typically be covered by 3 towers
placed at different locations. The cell towers are usually interconnected to each other
and the phone network and the internet by wired connections. Due to bandwidth
limitations each cell will have a maximum number of cell phones it can handle at once.
The cells are therefore sized depending on the expected usage density and may be much
smaller in cities. In that case much lower transmitter powers are used to avoid
broadcasting beyond the cell.
In order to handle the high traffic, multiple towers can be setup in the same area
(using different frequencies). This can be done permanently or temporarily
Cellular can greatly increase the capacity of simultaneous wireless phone calls. While a
phone company for example, has a license to 1000 frequencies, each cell must use
unique frequencies with each call using one of them when communicating. Because cells
only slightly overlap, the same frequency can be reused. Example cell 1 uses frequency
1-500, next door cell uses frequency 501-1000, next door can reuse frequency 1-500.
Cells 1 and 3 are not "touching" and do not overlap\communicate so each can reuse the
same frequencies.
This is even more greatly increased when phone companies implemented digital
networks. With digital, one frequency can host multiple simultaneous calls increasing
capacity even more.
As a phone moves around, a phone will "hand off" - automatically disconnect and
reconnect to the tower of another cell that gives the best reception.
Additionally, short-range Wi-Fi infrastructure is often used by smartphones as much as
possible as it offloads traffic from cell networks on to local area networks.
Hardware
The common components found on all phones are: