History of
Cellular Phones
Cellular: A type of
wireless communication that is most familiar to mobile phones users.
It's called 'cellular' because the system uses many base stations to
divide a service area into multiple 'cells'. Cellular calls are
transferred from base station to base station as a user travels from
cell to cell. - definition from the Wireless Advisor Glossary.
The basic concept of cellular phones
began in 1947, when researchers looked at crude mobile (car) phones and
realized that by using small cells (range of service area) with
frequency reuse they could increase the traffic capacity of mobile
phones substantially. However at that time, the technology to do so was
nonexistent.
Anything to do with broadcasting and
sending a radio or television message out over the airwaves comes under
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulation. A cell phone is a
type of two-way radio. In 1947, AT&T proposed that the FCC allocate a
large number of radio-spectrum frequencies so that widespread mobile
telephone service would become feasible and AT&T would have a incentive
to research the new technology. We can partially blame the FCC for the
gap between the initial concept of cellular service and its availability
to the public. The FCC decided to limit the amount of frequencies
available in 1947, the limits made only twenty-three phone conversations
possible simultaneously in the same service area - not a market
incentive for research.
The FCC reconsidered its position in
1968, stating "if the technology to build a better mobile service works,
we will increase the frequencies allocation, freeing the airwaves for
more mobile phones." AT&T and Bell Labs proposed a cellular system to
the FCC of many small, low-powered, broadcast towers, each covering a
'cell' a few miles in radius and collectively covering a larger area.
Each tower would use only a few of the total frequencies allocated to
the system. As the phones traveled across the area, calls would be
passed from tower to tower.
cell phone plans
Why is a cell phone called a cell phone?
One of the most interesting things about a cell phone is
that it is really a radio. Before cell phones, people who needed mobile
communications ability installed radio telephones in their cars.
In the radio telephone system, there was one central antenna tower per
city, and perhaps 25 channels available on that tower. The cellular
phone system divides the area of a city into small cells. This
allows extensive frequency reuse across a city, so that millions
of people can use cell phones simultaneously.
Here's how it works: The carrier chops
up an area, such as a city, into cells. Each cell is typically sized at
about 10 square miles (perhaps 3 miles x 3 miles). Cells are normally
thought of as hexagons on a big hexagonal grid. Each cell has a base
station that consists of a tower and a small building containing the
radio equipment. Cell phones have low-power transmitters in them and the
base station is also transmitting at low power. Low-power transmitters
have two advantages:
-
The power consumption of the cell
phone, which is normally battery-operated, is relatively low. Low
power means small batteries, and this is what has made handheld
cellular phones possible.
-
The transmissions of a base station
and the phones within its cell do not make it very far outside that
cell. Therefore, cells can use the same 56 frequencies. The same
frequencies can be reused extensively across the city.
The cellular approach requires a large
number of base stations in a city of any size. A typical large city can
have hundreds of towers. But because so many people are using cell
phones, costs remain fairly low per user. Each carrier in each city also
runs one central office called the Mobile Telephone Switching Office
(MTSO). This office handles all of the phone connections to the normal
land-based phone system, and controls all of the base stations in the
region.
As you move toward the edge of your
cell, your cell's base station will note that your signal strength is
diminishing. Meanwhile, the base station in the cell you are moving
toward (which is listening and measuring signal strength on all
frequencies, not just its own one-seventh) will be able to see your
phone's signal strength increasing. The two base stations coordinate
themselves through the MTSO, and at some point, your phone gets a signal
on a control channel telling it to change frequencies. This hand off
switches your phone to the new cell.