0wc 4 module 16-10-24
0wc 4 module 16-10-24
Module-4
Multiple Access Techniques: FDMA, TDMA, CDMA, SDMA, Hybrid Multiple Access Techniques,
Multicarrier Multiple Access Schemes. A Basic Cellular System: A basic cellular system connected to
PSTN, Parts of basic cellular system, Operation of a cellular system. [Text2: 8.2, 8.3, 8.4.5, 8.5, 8.6, 8.10,
9.2.2, 9.2.3, 9.3]
This chapter describes various multiple access techniques such as FDMA, TDMA, SSMA, SDMA, and
hybrid multiple access that are used in analog and digital wireless communications systems. Their relative
advantages and disadvantages have been outlined here. An overview of packet radio multiple access
technique including CSMA is presented in the end.
There are four basic forms of multiple access techniques applied to wireless communications, depending on
which particular resource is exploited: Frequency-Division Multiple Access (FDMA), Time-Division
Multiple Access (TDMA), Spread- Spectrum Multiple Access (SSMA), and Space-Division Multiple Access
(SDMA). The objective of all these multiple access strategies is to maximise the spectrum utilisation
The choice of an access method will have a great impact on the capacity and quality of service provided by a
wireless network. In practice, most wireless communication systems are a combination of one or more of
these multiple access strategies. There are many instances in multiple access com- munications, in which a
mobile subscriber is required to send a packet of information to the cell-site at a random instant in time,
leading to contention-based packet radio protocols such as ALOHA and CSMA. The multiple-access packet
radio protocols, also known as the medium access control sublayer protocols, are primarily a set of rules that
communicating mobile subscribers need to follow.
FDD :
If the forward channels and reverse channels use different
Frequencies that are spaced ,the duplexing scheme is referred as FDD
The FDD technique is mostly used in macrocellular communication systems designed for radio cov-
erage of several kilometres.
The base station dynamically assigns a different carrier frequency to each active mobile subscriber.
In order to adjust and maintain the transmission and reception frequencies, a frequency synthesiser is
used at the base station and the mobile station
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Fig 8.1
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If there are N channels in a FDMA system, the total bandwidth Bt is equal to N × Bc.
A guard band Wg is used to minimise adjacent channel interference between two adjacent channels,
as shown in Fig. 8.5.
To ensure acceptable signal quality performance, it is important that each frequency channel signal
be kept confined to the assigned channel bandwidth. Otherwise, there may be adjacent channel
interference which can degrade signal quality.
In both forward and reverse channels, the signal transmitted must be kept confined within its
assigned channel bandwidth, and the out-of-band signal energy causes negligible interference to the
subscribers using adjacent channels.
In order to minimise adjacent channel interference, two design measures are usually
considered:
a. The power spectral density of the modulated signal is controlled so that the power radiated into
the adjacent band is at least 60 to 80 dB below that in the desired band. This requirement can be
achieved with the use of highly selective filters in the system design.
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If a large number of mobile subscribers can operate satisfactorily within the allocated radio
spectrum then the multiple-access system is said to be highly spectral efficient.
In general, the spectral efficiency in FDMA systems depends on how closely the individual channels
(frequency subbands) can be assigned.
There are several factors that limit the adjacent channel spacing, the most important of which is
adjacent channel interference (ACI).
Q.4 explain Measures to handle the near–far problem in FDMA cellular systems,
1. Channel assignment should be done in such a way so that the frequencies in each cell are
grouped as far apart as possible from each other.
2. Guard bands should be included in the frequency channel to further reduce adjacent channel
interference.
This, however, has the effect of reducing the overall spectrum efficiency.
3. The transmitter power of the mobile subscribers should be controlled so as not to cause
interference to other transmissions in the cell.
In an FDMA system, many channels share the same transmitting antenna at the base station.
The transmitter RF power amplifiers or the transmitter multichannel power combiners are
nonlinear devices when operated at or near saturation signal levels for maximum power
efficiency.
The nonlinearities cause spreading of the signal in the frequency domain and generate
intermodulation frequencies which are undesirable harmonics.
The first-generation analog cellular communication systems use FDMA/FDD technique, with
speech signals being transmitted over the forward or reverse channels using frequency
modulation scheme. The data control functions are performed digitally by means of frequency-
shift keying modulation scheme for data transmission.
A useful feature of FDMA systems is that the radio transmission takes place over a narrow
channel of bandwidth (B/N ) Hz for each mobile subscriber. Due to narrowband transmissions,
flat fading may be experienced by the signal.
Illustrate the concept of FDMA/FDD system commonly used in First Generation (1G) analog
cellular communication systems such as AMPS.
Solution In FDMA/FDD systems, forward and reverse channels use different carrier frequencies,
and a fixed subchannel pair is assigned to a subscriber during the communication session.
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Fig. 8.6 shows the FDMA/FDD system commonly used in first generation analog cellular systems.
At the receiving end, the mobile unit filters the designated channel out of the composite signal
received.
The Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS) based on FDMA/FDD is. As shown in Fig. 8.7, the
AMPS system allocates 30 kHz of channel downlink (869 MHz–894 MHz) frequency band.
3. When a call is terminated, or when hand-off occurs, the occupied channels are released
which can be used by other mobile subscribers in the system.
4. Multiple or simultaneous mobile subscribers are accommodated in AMPS by allocating
each calling or called mobile subscriber a dedicated channel.
5. Voice signals are sent on the forward channel from the base station to the mobile user,
and on the reverse channel from the mobile user to the base station.
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In AMPS, analog narrowband frequency modulation technique is used to modulate the carrier.
The number of channels, N that can be simultaneously supported in an FDMA system is given by
N = (Bt 2 Bg) / Bc (8.1)
where Bt is the total spectrum allocation,
Bg is the guard band allocated at the edge of the allocated spectrum band, and
Bc is the channel bandwidth.
Bt and Bc may be specified in terms of simplex bandwidths where it is understood that there are
symmetric frequency allocations for the forward band and reverse band.
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The total number of TDMA time slots that can be provided in a TDMA system is determined by
multiplying the number of time slots per carrier channel by the number of channels available and
is given by
= N × t − 2 (8.2)
where N is the total number of TDMA time slots in a TDMA system
m is the number of time slots per carrier channel or the maximum number of TDMA subscribers
supported on each carrier channel
Bt is the total allocated spectrum bandwidth in Hz
Bc is the carrier channel bandwidth in Hz,Bg is the guard bandwidth in Hz
EXAMPLE 8.5 Number of simultaneous subscribers in GSM
Consider Global System for Mobile, which is a TDMA/FDD system that uses 25 MHz band for the
forward link, which is divided into radio channels of 200 kHz each. If 8 speech channels (time
slots) are supported on a single radio channel, find the number of simultaneous subscribers that can
be accommodated in GSM, assuming no guard band.
Solution
The allocated spectrum, B = 25 MHz = 25 × 106 Hz (given)
The channel bandwidth, Bc = 200 kHz = 200 × 10 Hz (given)
Number of speech channels, m = 8 per radio channel The guard bandwidth, Bg = 0
The number of simultaneous subscribers that can be accommodated in the GSM system is given as
N = m × (Bt − 2Bg) / Bc
Or, N = 8 × (25 × 106 2 × 0 / (200 × 103)
Or, N = 8 × (25 × 106 ) / (200 × 103) = 1000 subscribers
Hence the GSM system can accommodate 1000 simultaneous subscribers
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Q.7 List out Advantages of TDMA cellular over FDMA cellular systems
1. TDMA systems transmit each signal with sufficient guard time between time slots. This
enables to accommodate the transmission time delay because of propagation distance,
predetermined delay spread, source time inaccuracies due to clock instability, and the
tails of signal pulses due to transient responses.
2. There is a threefold to sixfold increase in the number of mobile subscribers using a single
carrier channel because of interleaving transmissions in the time domain.
3. Digital compression techniques are used to realise timesharing. It produces bit rates
which may be approximately one-tenth of the initial raw sample rate and about one-fifth
of the initial sample rate after inclusion of error detection/correction bits.
4. With the use of more advanced digital-modulation schemes and signal-processing
techniques, digital signals are much easier to process than analog signals.
5. Digital signals can be easily encrypted at the transmitting end and decrypted at the
receiver end, leading to safeguarding against eavesdropping.
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8.14 figure
Fig. 8.14
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Q.8 What is spread spectrum multiple access (SSMA) and how spread
spectrum works
Spread spectrum multiple access (SSMA)
- uses signals which have a transmission bandwidth that is several times greater than the
minimum required RF bandwidth.
- The spread-spectrum technique spreads the information-bearing data signal over a large
bandwidth.
- As a result, it allows the same spectrum to be used simultaneously by many subscribers in
adjacent cells.
- SSMA also provides immunity to multipath interference and robust capability for multiple
access.
- SSMA is not very bandwidth efficient when used by a single subscriber. However, spread
spectrum systems become bandwidth efficient in a multiple subscriber environment since many
subscribers can share the same spread spectrum bandwidth without interfering with one another.
CDMA
Spread spectrum is a modulation technique that is quite tolerant of interference, and it
forms the basis for the access technique known as spread-spectrum multiple access or
code-division multiple access (CDMA)
CDMA refers to a multiple access technique in which the individual mobile
subscribers occupy the complete spectrum whenever they transmit
In principle, CDMA can accommodate various subscribers with different bandwidth
requirements, switching methods and technical characteristics
CDMA is a form of spread spectrum modulation in which subscribers are allowed to
use the available spec- trum, but their signal must be spread with a specific PN code
to distinguish it from other signals
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It is a combination of two or more of the basic multiple- access techniques: FDMA, TDMA,
CDMA, and SDMA.
The main objective of hybrid multiple access approach is to provide a reasonable subscriber
growth strategy, thereby reducing the network complexity as the hybrid technique remains
backward compatible with the existing system.
Various hybrid multiple access techniques which are in use in different wireless systems are the
following:
1. Hybrid TDMA/FDMA
a. In practical wireless communication systems, TDMA is generally implemented in an
overlaid fashion on FDMA technique.
b. Every wireless communication system has an FDMA technique as baseline, and multiple-
access schemes such as TDMA are overlaid on this baseline.
c. The North American IS-54 digital cellular system is an example of such a system, which is
also called Narrowband TDMA system.
d. The number of frequency channels is typically large but the number of subscribers time-
sharing a single channel is relatively very small
e. GSM digital cellular system combines TDMA with FDMA as well as frequency hopping
(optional). Accordingly, a physical channel is partitioned in both frequency and time.
f. The carrier channel is divided in 8 time slots and each carrier channel supports eight
simultaneous physical channels mapped onto the eight time slots.
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g. A time slot assigned to a particular physical channel is naturally used in every TDMA
frame till the channel is engaged by a subscriber. Combined with a frequency-hopping
algorithm, partitioning of the channel in frequency arises because the carrier assigned to
such a time slot changes its frequency from one frame to the next.
h. In hybrid TDMA/FDMA technique, the allocated RF spectrum is divided into a number of
frequency channels, each of defined channel bandwidth, thereby enabling FDMA
operation, followed by dividing each carrier channel into a number of defined time slots in
time domain, leading to TDMA/FDMA operation. Figure 8.26 shows a generalised view of
FDMA/TDMA technique used in 2G digital cellular communication systems.
2. Hybrid TDMA/DSMA
a. In a hybrid time division direct sequence multiple access (TDMA/DSMA) technique,
each cell is using a different spreading code (DSMA employed between cells) that
is conveyed to the mobile subscribers operating in its coverage area. Inside each cell
(inside a DSMA channel),
b. TDMA is employed to multiplex multiple mobile subscribers. A particular time slot in a
TDMA frame is allocated to one mobile subscriber per cell.
c. This implies that only one mobile subscriber transmits in each cell at any time. This
results in significant reduction of near–far effect.
d. During the hand-off process from one cell to another cell or from one sector to another
sector of the same cell, it is the spreading code of the mobile subscriber which changes
while retaining the same allocated time slot of TDMA frame for maintaining the
communication link.
3. Hybrid TDMA/FHMA
a. In TDMA-based wireless communication systems, if the cochannel interference is
excessive or the occupied channel coincides with a deep frequency selective fading,
the received voice signal is distorted.
b. One of the practical methods to minimise the excessive co channel interference or
reduce the duration of the frequency selective fades is to provide for a slow
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frequency-hopping sequence that imposes a restriction on the co channel interference
effects or duration of the frequency selective fading. This is termed the TDMA/FHMA
technique.
c. This is widely employed in severe cochannel interference and multi-path environments.
d. In the hybrid TDMA/FHMA technique, the mobile subscriber can hop to a new
frequency at the beginning of every TDMA frame.
e. At each time slot, the mobile subscriber is hopped to a new frequency according to a
pseudorandom hopping sequence
4. Hybrid DSMA/FHMA
a. A hybrid direct sequence/frequency hopped multiple access (DS/FHMA) technique
combines direct sequence (DS) and frequency hopping (FH).the advantages of both
techniques.
b. With direct-sequence spreading, the original signal is multiplied by a known code signal
sequence of much larger bandwidth.
c. With frequency-hopped spreading, the centre frequency of the transmitted signal is
varied in a pseudo-random sequence. Practically, it is difficult to use the frequency
hopping unless a super-fast frequency synthesiser is used.
d. In the hybrid DSMA/FHMA technique, the signals are spread using spreading codes
(direct sequence signals are obtained), but these signals are not transmitted over a
constant carrier frequency;
e. they are trans- mitted over a frequency-hopping carrier frequency. The centre frequency
of a direct sequence modulated signal is made to hop periodically in a pseudorandom
manner.
f. In this technique, there is always possibility of transmitting the same data burst in more
than one frequency-hopped channels, there by improving the signal quality performance
in a hostile mobile environment.
5. Hybrid FDMA/DSMA
a. In the hybrid FDMA/DSMA technique, the available wide band frequency spectrum is
divided into a number of narrowband radio channels.
b. Each one of these narrowband channel DSMA system has processing gain which is much
lower than the original wideband DSMA system.
c. Depending on the requirements of various mobile subscribers, different narrowband
channels can be assigned to each one of these. The overall system capacity of the hybrid
FDMA/DSMA technique remains the same as that of the original DSMA system.
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Q.12 EXPLAIN MULTI CARRIER MULTIPLE ACCESS SCHEMES
Multicarrier multiple access schemes use multiple carrier signals at different frequencies,
sending some of the bits on each channel. There are a number of such schemes which find
application in advanced wireless communication systems.
8.10.1 OFDMA
Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) is a multi-user version of the
Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (OFDM) digital-modulation scheme.
This is similar to FDM in concept.
In the case of OFDM, all of the sub-channels are dedicated to a single data source.
The OFDM scheme uses advanced digital signal-processing techniques to distribute the
data over multiple carriers at precise frequencies.
The precise relationship among the subcarriers is referred to as orthogonality.
This means that the peaks of the power spectral density of each subcarrier occur at a point
at which the power of other subcarriers is zero. With OFDM, the subcarriers can be packed
tightly together because there is minimal interference between adjacent subcarriers.
Fig. 8.32 illustrates the concept of OFDM.
1. Let there be a data stream operating at R bps and an available bandwidth of (N × b),
2. where N is an integer related to the number of subcarriers, and b is the base frequency,
centered at 0. The entire bandwidth could be used to send the data stream, in which case
each bit duration would be 1/R. The alternative is to split the data stream into N
substreams, using a serial-to-parallel converter.
3. Each substream has a data rate of R/N bps and is transmitted on a separate subcarrier, with
a spacing between adjacent subcarriers of b. Now the bit duration is N/R.
4. The base frequency, b is the lowest-frequency subcarrier. All of the other subcarriers are
integer multiples of the base frequency, namely 2 b, 3 b, and so on.
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5. OFDM has several advantages. First, frequency-selective fading affects some subchannels
only and not the complete signal. If the data stream is protected by a forward error-
correcting code, the impact of frequency
8.10.2 SC-FDMA
1. Single-carrier FDMA (SC-FDMA) is a frequency-division multiple access scheme.
2. SC-FDMA is a new multiple access technique, which utilises single-carrier modulation, .
3. SC-FDMA is currently adopted as the uplink multiple access scheme in 3GPP, and a variant
of SC-FDMA using code spreading is used in 3GPP2 uplink. IEEE 802.16 is also considering
it for uplink.
4. SC-FDMA can be viewed as a linearly precoded OFDMA scheme (LP-OFDMA).
5. It can also be viewed as a single-carrier multiple access scheme.
6. Single Carrier FDMA (SC-FDMA) is an extension of SC-FDE to accommodate multiple-
user access. SC-FDMA is also regarded as DFT-precoded or DFT-spread OFDMA.
7. The main advantage of SC-FDE and SC-FDMA/LP-OFDMA signals over conventional
OFDM and OFDMA signals is that they have lower peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR)
because of its inherent single carrier structure.
8.In SC-FDMA, multiple access is made possible by inserting silent Fourier-coefficients on the
transmitter side before the IFFT, and removing them on the receiver side before the IFFT.
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Different users are assigned to different Fourier-coefficients (sub-carriers).
In SC-FDMA, equalisation is achieved on the receiver side after the FFT calculation, by
multiplying
Fig. 8.33 depicts the pictorial representation of the relationship among SC-FDMA, OFDMA,
and DS-CDMA/FDE.
8.10.3 MC-CDMA
1. The Multi-Carrier Code Division Multiple Access (MC-CDMA) scheme is a combination
of OFDM and DS-CDMA.
2. MC-CDMA shows high envelope power fluctuation as in OFDM. For an N-subcarrier
system,
The peak power becomes N times the average power in the worst case and the signal is
distorted in the RF power amplifiers, yielding spurious power emission. To reduce the
distortion, the operating point in the amplifiers can be backed off, but this may lead to
inefficient power usage.
3. MC-CDMA maintains the original signaling interval while it spreads the signal over wide
bandwidth like DS-CDMA. To transmit 1 Mbps data with the processing gain of 20 dB, the
chip rate required in DS-CDMA is 100 Mcps, which necessitates four times faster internal
digital front-end processor or at least a 100-MHz analogue matched filter.
4. MC-CDMA is sensitive to frequency offset and small Doppler spread is preferred. The
difference in the arrival times of multipath signals in indoor wire less environment is
typically much less than 1 μs.
5. MC-CDMA gathers nearly all the scattered powers effectively using the cyclic prefix
insertion technique. As the received signals are sampled at the original symbol rate in MC-
CDMA, the sampling points may not be optimum.
In general, the performance of MC-CDMA is equivalent to the m-finger rake receiver in DS-
CDMA, where m is the number of symbols in cyclic prefix of MC-CDMA.
8.10.4 MC-DS-CDMA
1. The Multi-Carrier Direct Sequence Code Division Multiple Access (MC-DS-CDMA)
scheme is a combination of time-domain spreading and Orthogonal Frequency Division
Multiplexing (OFDM),
2. while Multi-Carrier Code Division Multiple Access (MC-CDMA) is a combination of
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frequency domain spreading and OFDM. In MC-CDMA, a good Bit Error Rate (BER)
performance can be achieved by using Frequency-Domain Equalisation (FDE), since the
frequency diversity gain is obtained.
On the other hand, conventional MC-DS-CDMA cannot obtain the frequency diversity gain.
Mobile Subscriber Unit (MSU) Basically, a mobile subscriber unit comprises of a single
antenna, transreceiver, and microprocessor-based control circuit. Because the cellular system is
full duplex, the transmitter and receiver must operate simultaneously with a single antenna.
A duplexer is used to separate the transmit and receive signals. The 45-MHz band separation
between transmit and receive frequencies makes the operation relatively easy, and simplifies
frequency synthesiser design.
For example, GSM mobile subscriber comprises of two parts––the mobile equipment (ME) and
an electronic smart card called a subscriber identity module (SIM).
The ME is the hardware used by the subscriber to access the cellular network.
The SIM is a card, which plugs into the ME. This card identifies the MS subscriber and also
provides other information regarding the service that the subscriber should receive.
Each mobile subscriber consists of a mobile antenna, a multiple-frequency radio transceiver,
and a control/logic unit.
The transceiver uses a frequency synthesiser to tune into any designated cellular system
channel.
The control unit houses all the user interfaces, including a built-in handset or earphone or
external microphone/speaker arrangement.
The logic unit interrupts subscriber actions and system commands while managing the
operation of the transceiver including transmit power.
Voice calls over cellular communication networks require two full-duplex radio-frequency
channels simultaneously.
Two types of channels are available between the mobile subscriber and the base station:
control channels and traffic channels.
Control channels are used to exchange information concerning initiating and
maintaining calls and with establishing of a relationship between a mobile
subscriber and the nearest base station. The control channel is also used for
transferring control and diagnostic information between mobile subscribers and
a central cellular switch through a cell-site. Traffic channels carry a voice or data
connection between subscribers.
The traffic channel is the actual voice channel where calling mobile subscribers
communicate directly with other called mobile subscribers and landline
telephone subscribers through the cell-site and MTSO.
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Base stations transmit on the forward control channel and forward voice channel and
receive on the reverse control channel and reverse voice channel.
Similarly, mobile subscribers transmit on the reverse control channel and reverse voice
channel and receive on the forward control channel and forward voice channel.
Establishment of a voice call within a cellular communication system is similar to
completing a telephone voice call using the landline PSTN. The use of a cellular system is
fully automated and requires no action on the part of the mobile subscriber other than
placing or answering a call.
When a mobile subscriber is first turned on, it performs a series of start-up procedures and
then samples the received signal strength on all control channels.
The mobile subscriber automatically gets tuned to the control channel with the strongest
received signal strength level and synchronises to the control data transmitted by the cell-
site controller.
The mobile subscriber interprets the data and continues monitoring the control channel(s).
The mobile subscriber automatically rescans the control channels periodically to ensure
that it is using the best control channel.
From a subscriber’s point of view, the operation can be divided into four parts and a
hand-off procedure.
– Mobile-unit initialisation or registration
– Mobile-originated calls
– Network-originated calls
– Call termination
– Hand-off procedure
Q.14 With steps explain Mobile-Unit Initialisation or Registration
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6. A very important aspect for successful operation of numerous system functions in the
cellular system is that each and every mobile subscriber units must be registered at one of
the MTSOs or MSCs.
7. This is maintained for authentication and identity verification, access privileges, and also
for billing purposes. Moreover, the cellular system needs to know whether the MSU is
currently located in its own home service area or is visiting some other service area. This
enables incoming calls meant for roaming mobile subscribers to be routed to an appropriate
cell location and assures desirable support for outgoing calls.
8. CSEs periodically broadcast control signals to determine and test nearby MSUs.
9. This is done by exchanging signals known as handshake signals between the CSE and the
MSU. Each MSU listens for broadcast control signals transmitted by CSEs. Some of the
information contained in the broadcast forward control signals includes cellular network
identifier, timestamp, ID (identification) of the paging area, gateway MSC address, and
other system parameters of the CSE. If the MSU listens to a broadcast forward control
signal from the new CSE, it updates its information database.
10. The MSU uses this information to locate the nearest CSE and establish an appropriate
communication link with the cellular system through the nearest operational CSE as a
gateway.
Q.15 Explain the steps for Mobile-Originated Calls
Within a cellular communication system, the following types of mobile-originated calls can
take place involving mobile cellular subscribers originating calls:
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– Mobile (cellular)-to-landline (PSTN) call
– Mobile (cellular)-to-mobile (cellular) within the same cell
– Mobile (cellular)-to-mobile (cellular) operating in different cells
A general description for the sequence of events involved with connecting a call initiated by a
mobile
subscriber in a cellular system is briefly described here.
Q.16 Explain Mobile (Cellular)-to-Landline (PSTN) Call Procedures
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