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Cellular
Networks



             NAME- ADITYA PANDEY
            ENROLL. NO.- 04613304409

                                  1
CONTENTS
Introduction
Working
Benefits
Characteristics
Movement From Cell To Cell
Mobile Phone Networks
Future Scope
Bibliography


                              2
INTRODUCTION
•A cellular network is a radio network made up of
a number of radio cells (or just cells) each served
by at least one fixed-location transceiver known as
a cell site or base station.




                                                      3
Example
 An example of a simple non-telephone cellular
  system is an taxi driver's radio system where the taxi
  company has several transmitters based around a city
  that can communicate directly with each taxi.




                                                       4
WORKING




 MSMobile station; BSTBase station transceiver; MSCMobile switching center; BSCBase station controller; PSTNPublic
                                               switched telephone network




                                                                                                                          5
BENEFITS
More capacity due to spectral reuse
Lower transmission power due to smaller
 transmitter/receiver distances
reduced power usage
larger coverage area
reduced interference from other signals




                                           6
CHARACTERISTICS
PAGIN
 G
 • Paging takes place by sending the broadcast message to
 all of the cells.

 • In mobile telephony systems, the most important use of
 broadcast information is to set up channels for one to one
 communication between the mobile transceiver and the
 base station.

 • Paging messages can be used for information transfer.


                                                              7
FREQUENCY REUSE
•FDMA

  •Frequency Division Multiple
  Access or FDMA is a channel
  access     method used      in
  multiple-access protocols as a
  channelization protocol.

  •FDMA gives users an
  individual allocation of one or
  several frequency        bands,
  or channels. Multiple Access
  systems coordinate access
  between multiple users.

                                    8
•CDMA

  • Code       division      multiple
    access (CDMA)      is   a channel
    access method utilized by various
    radio             communication
    technologies.

  • It should not be confused with
    the mobile phone standards
    called cdmaOne and CDMA2000
    (which are often referred to as
    simply "CDMA"), which use
    CDMA as an underlying channel
    access method.


                                        9
• TDMA
   • Time division multiple access. A method of digital wireless
     communications transmission that allows a large number of
     users to access (in sequence) a single radio frequency
     channel without interference by allocating unique time slots
     to each user within the channel. Each frequency is broken
     into time slots through which bits of data flow.
   • TDMA is used in second generation wireless phone systems,
     such as GSM and TDMA.
   • TDMA cannot be used to separate signals from one cell to
     the next since the effects of both vary with position and this
     would make signal separation practically impossible.
   • Time division multiple access, however, is used in
     combination with either FDMA or CDMA in a number of
     systems to give multiple channels within the coverage area
     of a single cell.

                                                                      10
MOVEMENT FROM CELL TO CELL &
HANDOVER
•RADIO TAXI NETWORK
  •In a primitive taxi system, when the taxi moved away from a
  first tower and closer to a second tower, the taxi driver
  manually switched from one frequency to another as needed.
  If a communication was interrupted due to a loss of a signal,
  the taxi driver asked the base station operator to repeat the
  message on a different frequency.




                                                                  11
MOVEMENT FROM CELL TO CELL &
HANDOVER
 •CELLULAR NETWORK
  •In a cellular system, as the distributed mobile transceivers
  move from cell to cell during an ongoing continuous
  communication, switching from one cell frequency to a
  different cell frequency is done electronically without
  interruption.
  •This is called the handover or handoff.
MOBILE PHONE NETWORKS
   The most common example of a cellular network is a mobile
    phone (cell phone) network.
   A mobile phone is a portable telephone which receives or makes calls
    through a cell site (base station), or transmitting tower.
   Since almost all mobile phones use cellular technology,
    including GSM, CDMA, and AMPS (analog), the term "cell phone" is
    in some regions, notably the US, used interchangeably with "mobile
    phone".
   However, satellite phones are mobile phones that do not
    communicate directly with a ground-based cellular tower, but may do
    so indirectly by way of a satellite.



                                                                           13
MOBILE PHONE NETWORKS
(Contd.)
 There are a number of different digital cellular technologies,
  including:
    Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM)
    General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)
    Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)
    Evolution-Data Optimized (EV-DO)
    Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution (EDGE or GSM EDGE)
    3GSM
    Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications (DECT)
    Digital AMPS (IS-136/TDMA)
    Integrated Digital Enhanced Network (iDEN).
CDMA
 Interim Standard 95 (IS-95) is the first CDMA-based digital cellular
  standard pioneered by Qualcomm. The brand name for IS-95
  is cdmaOne.
 It is a 2G Mobile Telecommunications Standard that uses CDMA,
  a multiple access scheme for digital radio, to send voice, data and
  signaling data (such as a dialed telephone number) between
  mobile telephones and cell sites.
 CDMA or "code division multiple access" is a digital radio system that
  transmits streams of bits (PN codes).
 CDMA permits several radios to share the same frequencies.
 Unlike TDMA "time division multiple access", a competing system
  used in 2G GSM, all radios can be active all the time, because network
  capacity does not directly limit the number of active radios.


                                                                      15
CDMA (Contd.)
 Since larger numbers of phones can be served by smaller numbers of
  cell-sites, CDMA-based standards have a significant economic
  advantage over TDMA-based standards that used frequency-division
  multiplexing.




                                                                       16
GSM
 GSM (Global System for Mobile communications: originally
  from Groupe Spécial Mobile) is the most popular standard
  for mobile phones in the world.
 Its promoter, the GSM Association, estimates that 80% of the global
  mobile market uses the standard. GSM is used by over 3 billion people
  across more than 212 countries and territories.
 GSM differs from its predecessors in that both signaling and speech
  channels are digital, and thus is considered a second generation (2G)
  mobile phone system.
 This has also meant that data communication was easy to build into
  the system. GSM EDGE is a 3G version of the protocol.




                                                                      17
FUTURE SCOPE
 Next Generation Mobile Networks (NGMN) Ltd. - Consortium with
  partnership of major mobile operators

 Recommendations without specific technology prescriptions

 Target to establish performance targets, recommendations and
  deployment scenarios for      future wide-area mobile broadband
  network packet switched core.

 The architecture intended to provide a smooth migration of existing
  2G/3G networks towards an IP network that is cost competitive and
  has broadband performance.

 Multi-hopping Networks.


                                                                    18
BIBLIOGRAPHY
www.google.com
www.wikipedia.org
http://www.acm.org/crossroads/xrds7-2/cellular.html




                                                   19
Thank You




            20

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Cellular network presentation

  • 1. Cellular Networks NAME- ADITYA PANDEY ENROLL. NO.- 04613304409 1
  • 2. CONTENTS Introduction Working Benefits Characteristics Movement From Cell To Cell Mobile Phone Networks Future Scope Bibliography 2
  • 3. INTRODUCTION •A cellular network is a radio network made up of a number of radio cells (or just cells) each served by at least one fixed-location transceiver known as a cell site or base station. 3
  • 4. Example An example of a simple non-telephone cellular system is an taxi driver's radio system where the taxi company has several transmitters based around a city that can communicate directly with each taxi. 4
  • 5. WORKING MSMobile station; BSTBase station transceiver; MSCMobile switching center; BSCBase station controller; PSTNPublic switched telephone network 5
  • 6. BENEFITS More capacity due to spectral reuse Lower transmission power due to smaller transmitter/receiver distances reduced power usage larger coverage area reduced interference from other signals 6
  • 7. CHARACTERISTICS PAGIN G • Paging takes place by sending the broadcast message to all of the cells. • In mobile telephony systems, the most important use of broadcast information is to set up channels for one to one communication between the mobile transceiver and the base station. • Paging messages can be used for information transfer. 7
  • 8. FREQUENCY REUSE •FDMA •Frequency Division Multiple Access or FDMA is a channel access method used in multiple-access protocols as a channelization protocol. •FDMA gives users an individual allocation of one or several frequency bands, or channels. Multiple Access systems coordinate access between multiple users. 8
  • 9. •CDMA • Code division multiple access (CDMA) is a channel access method utilized by various radio communication technologies. • It should not be confused with the mobile phone standards called cdmaOne and CDMA2000 (which are often referred to as simply "CDMA"), which use CDMA as an underlying channel access method. 9
  • 10. • TDMA • Time division multiple access. A method of digital wireless communications transmission that allows a large number of users to access (in sequence) a single radio frequency channel without interference by allocating unique time slots to each user within the channel. Each frequency is broken into time slots through which bits of data flow. • TDMA is used in second generation wireless phone systems, such as GSM and TDMA. • TDMA cannot be used to separate signals from one cell to the next since the effects of both vary with position and this would make signal separation practically impossible. • Time division multiple access, however, is used in combination with either FDMA or CDMA in a number of systems to give multiple channels within the coverage area of a single cell. 10
  • 11. MOVEMENT FROM CELL TO CELL & HANDOVER •RADIO TAXI NETWORK •In a primitive taxi system, when the taxi moved away from a first tower and closer to a second tower, the taxi driver manually switched from one frequency to another as needed. If a communication was interrupted due to a loss of a signal, the taxi driver asked the base station operator to repeat the message on a different frequency. 11
  • 12. MOVEMENT FROM CELL TO CELL & HANDOVER •CELLULAR NETWORK •In a cellular system, as the distributed mobile transceivers move from cell to cell during an ongoing continuous communication, switching from one cell frequency to a different cell frequency is done electronically without interruption. •This is called the handover or handoff.
  • 13. MOBILE PHONE NETWORKS  The most common example of a cellular network is a mobile phone (cell phone) network.  A mobile phone is a portable telephone which receives or makes calls through a cell site (base station), or transmitting tower.  Since almost all mobile phones use cellular technology, including GSM, CDMA, and AMPS (analog), the term "cell phone" is in some regions, notably the US, used interchangeably with "mobile phone".  However, satellite phones are mobile phones that do not communicate directly with a ground-based cellular tower, but may do so indirectly by way of a satellite. 13
  • 14. MOBILE PHONE NETWORKS (Contd.)  There are a number of different digital cellular technologies, including:  Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM)  General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)  Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA)  Evolution-Data Optimized (EV-DO)  Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution (EDGE or GSM EDGE)  3GSM  Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications (DECT)  Digital AMPS (IS-136/TDMA)  Integrated Digital Enhanced Network (iDEN).
  • 15. CDMA  Interim Standard 95 (IS-95) is the first CDMA-based digital cellular standard pioneered by Qualcomm. The brand name for IS-95 is cdmaOne.  It is a 2G Mobile Telecommunications Standard that uses CDMA, a multiple access scheme for digital radio, to send voice, data and signaling data (such as a dialed telephone number) between mobile telephones and cell sites.  CDMA or "code division multiple access" is a digital radio system that transmits streams of bits (PN codes).  CDMA permits several radios to share the same frequencies.  Unlike TDMA "time division multiple access", a competing system used in 2G GSM, all radios can be active all the time, because network capacity does not directly limit the number of active radios. 15
  • 16. CDMA (Contd.)  Since larger numbers of phones can be served by smaller numbers of cell-sites, CDMA-based standards have a significant economic advantage over TDMA-based standards that used frequency-division multiplexing. 16
  • 17. GSM  GSM (Global System for Mobile communications: originally from Groupe Spécial Mobile) is the most popular standard for mobile phones in the world.  Its promoter, the GSM Association, estimates that 80% of the global mobile market uses the standard. GSM is used by over 3 billion people across more than 212 countries and territories.  GSM differs from its predecessors in that both signaling and speech channels are digital, and thus is considered a second generation (2G) mobile phone system.  This has also meant that data communication was easy to build into the system. GSM EDGE is a 3G version of the protocol. 17
  • 18. FUTURE SCOPE  Next Generation Mobile Networks (NGMN) Ltd. - Consortium with partnership of major mobile operators  Recommendations without specific technology prescriptions  Target to establish performance targets, recommendations and deployment scenarios for future wide-area mobile broadband network packet switched core.  The architecture intended to provide a smooth migration of existing 2G/3G networks towards an IP network that is cost competitive and has broadband performance.  Multi-hopping Networks. 18
  • 20. Thank You 20