A cellular network is a radio network distributed over land areas called cells, each served by at least one
fixed-location transceiver known as a cell site or base station . When joined together these cells
provide radio coverage over a wide geographic area. This enables a large number
of portable transceivers (e.g., mobile phones, pagers,
etc.) to communicate with each other and with fixed transceivers and telephones
anywhere in the network, via base stations, even if some of the transceivers
are moving through more than one cell during transmission.
Cellular networks offer a number of
advantages over alternative solutions:
- increased capacity
- reduced power use
- larger coverage area
- reduced interference from other signals
An example of a simple non-telephone
cellular system is an old taxi driver's radio system
where the taxi company has several transmitters based around a city that can
communicate directly with each taxi.
Example of frequency reuse factor or
pattern 1/4
In a cellular radio system, a land area to be supplied
with radio service is divided into regular shaped cells, which can be
hexagonal, square, circular or some other irregular shapes, although hexagonal
cells are conventional. Each of these cells is assigned multiple frequencies (f1
- f6) which have corresponding radio base stations.
The group of frequencies can be reused in other cells, provided that the same
frequencies are not reused in adjacent neighboring cells as that would cause co-channel
interference.
The increased capacity in a cellular network, compared with a
network with a single transmitter, comes from the fact that the same radio
frequency can be reused in a different area for a completely different
transmission. If there is a single plain transmitter, only one transmission can
be used on any given frequency. Unfortunately, there is inevitably some level
of interference
from the signal from the other cells which use the same frequency. This means
that, in a standard FDMA system, there must be at least a one cell gap between
cells which reuse the same frequency.
In the simple case of the taxi
company, each radio had a manually operated channel selector knob to tune to
different frequencies. As the drivers moved around, they would change from
channel to channel. The drivers knew which frequency covered approximately what area. When
they did not receive a signal from the transmitter, they would try other
channels until they found one that worked. The taxi drivers would only speak
one at a time, when invited by the base station operator (in a sense TDMA).
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