2g Drive Analysis
2g Drive Analysis
service similar to cellular telephone service but emphasizing personal service and extended
mobility. It's sometimes referred to as digital cellular (although cellular systems can also be
digital). Like cellular, PCS is for mobile users and requires a number of antennas to blanket an
area of coverage. As a user moves around, the user's phone signal is picked up by the nearest
antenna and then forwarded to a base station that connects to the wired network. The phone
itself is slightly smaller than a cellular phone. According to Sprint, PCS is now available to 230
million people.The "personal" in PCS distinguishes this service from cellular by emphasizing that,
unlike cellular, which was designed for car phone use and coverage of highways and roads, PCS is
designed for greater user mobility. It generally requires more cell transmitters for coverage, but
has the advantage of fewer blind spots. Technically, cellular systems in the United States operate
in the 824-849 megahertz (MHz) frequency bands; PCS operates in the1850-1990 MHz bands.
DCS devices can be used for "grooming" telecommunications traffic, switching traffic from one
circuit to another in the event of a network failure, supporting automated provisioning, and
other applications. Having a DCS in a circuit-switched network provides important flexibility that
can otherwise only be obtained at higher cost using manual "DSX" cross-connect patch panels.It
is important to realize that while DCS devices "switch" traffic, they are not packet switches—they
switch circuits, not packets, and the circuit arrangements they are used to manage tend to
persist over very long time spans, typically months or longer, as compared to packet switches,
which can route every packet differently, and operate on micro- or millisecond time spans.
D-AMPS is one of three digital wireless technologies that use TDMA. The other two are GSM
and PDC. Each of these technologies interprets TDMA differently so they are not compatible. An
advantage of D-AMPS is that it is easier to upgrade to from an existing analog AMPS network. An
alternative to D-AMPS and the other two TDMA technologies is direct sequence code division
multiple access (CDMA).
1) The "cordless private branch exchange." A company can connect to a wired telephone
company and redistribute signals by radio antenna to a large number of telephone users within
the company, each with their own number. A cordless PBX would be especially useful and save
costs in a company with a number of mobile employees such as those in a large warehouse.
2) Wireless Local Loop (WLL). Users in a neighborhood typically served by a telephone company
wired local loop can be connected instead by a cordless phone that exchanges signals with a
neighborhood antenna. A standard telephone (or any device containing a telephone such as a
computer modem or fax machine) is simply plugged into a fixed access unit (FAU), which
contains a transceiver. The Wireless Local Loop can be installed in an urban area where many
users share the same antenna.
3) Cordless Terminal Mobility. The arrangement used by businesses for a cordless PBX can also
be used by a service that provided cordless phone numbers for individual subscribers. In general,
the mobility would be less than that available for GSM
4) Home cordless phones. A homeowner could install a single-cell antenna within the home and
use it for a number of cordless phones throughout the home and garden.
5) GSM/DECT internetworking. Part of the DECT standard describes how it can interact with the
GSM standard so that users can be free to move with a telephone from the outdoors (and GSM
signals) into an indoor environment (and a DECT system). It's expected that many GSM service
providers may want to extend their service to support DECT signals inside buildings. A dual-
mode phone would automatically search first for a DECT connection, then for a GSM connection
if DECT
FREQUENCE REUSE
Frequency reuse is the process of using the same radio
frequencies on radio transmitter sites within a geographic area,
which are separated by sufficient distance to cause minimal
interference with each other. Frequency reuse allows for a
dramatic increase in the number of customers that can be served
(capacity) within a geographic area on a limited amount of radio
spectrum (limited number of radio channels).
Handover
2 Purpose
3 Types
4 Comparison
5 Possibility
6 Implementations
8 Vertical handover
9 Handoff Prioritization
Purpose
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;
etc.
A special case is possible, in which the source and the target are
one and the same cell and only the used channel is changed
during the handover. Such a handover, in which the cell is not
changed, is called intra-cell handover. The purpose of intra-cell
handover is to change one channel, which may be interfered or
fading with a new clearer or less fading channel.
Hard handover
Is one in which the channel in the source cell is released and only
then the channel in the target cell is engaged. Thus the connection
to the source is broken before or 'as' the connection to the target
is made—for this reason such handovers are also known as break-
before-make. Hard handovers are intended to be instantaneous in
order to minimize the disruption to the call. A hard handover is
perceived by network engineers as an event during the call. It
requires the least processing by the network providing service.
When the mobile is between base stations, then the mobile can
switch with any of the base stations, so the base stations bounce
the link with the mobile back and forth. This is called 'ping-
ponging'.
Soft handover
Is one in which the channel in the source cell is retained and used
for a while in parallel with the channel in the target cell. In this
case the connection to the target is established before the
connection to the source is broken, hence this handover is called
make-before-break. The interval, during which the two
connections are used in parallel, may be brief or substantial. For
this reason the soft handover is perceived by network engineers
as a state of the call, rather than a brief event. Soft handovers may
involve using connections to more than two cells: connections to
three, four or more cells can be maintained by one phone at the
same time. When a call is in a state of soft handover, the signal of
the best of all used channels can be used for the call at a given
moment or all the signals can be combined to produce a clearer
copy of the signal. The latter is more advantageous, and when
such combining is performed both in the downlink (forward link)
and the uplink (reverse link) the handover is termed as softer.
Softer handovers are possible when the cells involved in the
handovers have a single cell site.
Comparison[edit]
Possibility[edit]
Vertical handover[edit]
Handoff Prioritization[edit]
Queuing
If during ongoing call mobile unit moves from one cellular system
to a different cellular system which is controlled by different
MTSO, a handoff procedure which is used to avoid dropping of call
is referred as Inter System Handoff.
If during ongoing call mobile unit moves from one cellular system
to adjacent cellular system which is controlled by same MTSO, a
handoff procedure which is used to avoid dropping of call is
referred as Intra System Handoff.
In Intra System Handoff local calls always remain local call only
since after handoff also the call is handled by same MTSO.
GSM - Security and Encryption(A3/A5/A8
Algorithm)
Algorithm A5
Encrypted voice and data communications between the MS and
the network is accomplished by using the ciphering algorithm A5.
Encrypted communication is initiated by a ciphering mode request
command from the GSM network. Upon receipt of this command,
the mobile station begins encryption and decryption of data using
the ciphering algorithm (A5) and the ciphering key (Kc).
picocell
a small mobile phone base station connected to the phone
network via the Internet, typically used to improve mobile phone
reception indoors and considered to be smaller than a microcell.
The BTSs are equipped with radios that are able to modulate layer
1 of interface Um; for GSM 2G+ the modulation type is Gaussian
minimum-shift keying (GMSK), while for EDGE-enabled networks it
is GMSK and 8-PSK. This modulation is a kind of continuous-phase
frequency shift keying. In GMSK, the signal to be modulated onto
the carrier is first smoothed with a Gaussian low-pass filter prior
to being fed to a frequency modulator, which greatly reduces the
interference to neighboring channels (adjacent-channel
interference).
Sectorization
By using directional antennas on a base station, each pointing in
different directions, it is possible to sectorise the base station so
that several different cells are served from the same location.
Typically these directional antennas have a beamwidth of 65 to 85
degrees. This increases the traffic capacity of the base station
(each frequency can carry eight voice channels) whilst not greatly
increasing the interference caused to neighboring cells (in any
given direction, only a small number of frequencies are being
broadcast). Typically two antennas are used per sector, at spacing
of ten or more wavelengths apart. This allows the operator to
overcome the effects of fading due to physical phenomena such as
multipath reception. Some amplification of the received signal as
it leaves the antenna is often used to preserve the balance
between uplink and downlink signal.
Base station controller
The base station controller (BSC) provides, classically, the
intelligence behind the BTSs. Typically a BSC has tens or even
hundreds of BTSs under its control. The BSC handles allocation of
radio channels, receives measurements from the mobile phones,
and controls handovers from BTS to BTS (except in the case of an
inter-BSC handover in which case control is in part the
responsibility of the anchor MSC).