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Published byAlan Riley Modified over 9 years ago
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Ch 16. Wireless WANs
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16.1 Cellular Telephony Designed to provide communication between two “moving” units – To track moving units (mobile station; MS), service area is divided into small regions called cells – Each cell is controlled by network station called the base station (BS)
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Frequency-Reuse Cell size depends on the population of the area – High-density areas require smaller cells Frequency reuse – The set of available frequencies is limited – Neighboring cells cannot use the same set of frequencies due to wireless interference near boundary – Number of cells for a frequency reuse pattern Reuse factor
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Basic Operations Transmitting – MS (using a setup channel) Closest BS MSC (Mobile Switching Center) Telephone central office If the callee is available, assign a voice channel Receiving – Telephone central office MSC (search for MS by paging) BS MS If answers, assign a voice channel Handoff – If MS moves from one cell to another, MSC seeks a new cell that better accommodates the communication of the MS – Hard handoff – one BS-MS connection at any time – Soft handoff – allow two BS-MS connections when a handoff occurs Roaming: extension of coverage of a service provider using other providers’ service
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First Generation Designed for voice communication Example: Advanced Mobile Phone System (AMPS) – North America standard for analog cellular system – Unlicensed ISM 800 MHz band – Two separate analog channels
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AMPS FM and FSK (frequency shift keying) modulation
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Second Generation Designed for digitized voice Digital AMPS (D-AMPS) – Backward compatible with AMPS – Same band as AMPS – PCM modulation with TDMA – FDMA
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GSM Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM) – European standard – Two 25 MHz bands for duplex communications
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GSM TDMA – FDMA Channel data (bit) rate = (1/120ms) x 26 x 8 x 156.25 = 270.8kbps In Gaussian minimum-shift keying, 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
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IS-95 CDMA CSMA/DSSS and FDMA Two 25 MHz bands for duplex communications Forward transmission (BS MS) – Synchronization is required for CDMA – use GPS (will see later) Electronic serial number
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IS-95 CDMA 64 (forward) channels – Channel 0 is a pilot channel for synchronization Bit synchronization, serves as a phase reference for demodulation; Allows the mobile station to compare the signal strength of neighboring bases for handoff decisions. – Channel 32 gives system information to MS – Channels 1 to 7 are used for paging, to send messages to one or more mobile stations. – Other channels are for data traffic
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Reverse transmission Reverse transmission (MS BS) – DSSS (direct sequence spread spectrum) instead of CDMA – Normally 94 reverse channels (62 voice chs.) Soft handoff; frequency reuse factor = 1
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Frequency Reuse Factor SystemReuse Factor AMPS (1G)7 D-AMPS (2G)7 GSM (2G)3 CDMA (2G)1
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Third Generation Designed to provide both digital “data and voice” – Comparable voice quality to the existing telephone net. – Data rate of 144 Kbps for moving vehicles, 384 Kbps for pedestrians, 2 Mbps for stationary users – Support for packet- and circuit-switched data service – A band of 2 GHz with bandwidth of 2 MHz – Interface to the Internet European; W-CDMA North America; CDMA-2000 IMT-2000
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16.2 Satellite Networks Orbits – Time required to make a complete trip around the Earth is determined by the distance of the satellite from the center of the Earth (Kepler’s law) Geostationary Earth Orbit Medium Earth Orbit Low Earth Orbit
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Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) Satellites move at the speed of Earth’s rotation – Altitude of satellite is 35,786 Km
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Medium-Earth-Orbit (MEO) Global Positioning System (GPS) – Four satellites are visible from any point on Earth Trilateration is used to find a location – Three satellites are sufficient to locate a land unit by measuring distance from each satellite – Four satellites can be used when there is a clock offset between satellites and the land unit (Read the textbook, p 483) Applications of GPS – Military purpose, car navigation, clock synchronization of IS-95 CDMA cellular system
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Low-Earth-Orbit (LEO) Cellular-like service using low-orbit satellites Iridium – Aim for providing direct worldwide communication using handheld terminals Globalstar Teledesic – Aim for providing fiber-optic-like communication (broadband channels, low error rate, low delay) Intersatellite link User mobile link Gateway link 66 satellite network 12 orbits, 288 satellite network
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Homework Exercise – 19, 20, 26
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