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Cellular Mobile Communication

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UNIT-I

1. Draw the general view of telecommunication and explain the function of the each unit?

Answer: The general view of the cellular system is shown in Fig.1.

Fig.1 A general view of cellular telecommunications system


Antenna:
Antenna pattern, antenna gain, antenna tilting, and antenna height 6 all affect the cellular system design.
The antenna pattern can be omnidirectional, directional, or any shape in both the vertical and the horizon
planes. Antenna gain compensates for the transmitted power. Different antenna patterns and antenna gains
at the cell site and at the mobile units would affect the system performance and so must be considered in
the system design. The antenna patterns seen in cellular systems are different from the patterns seen in
free space. If a mobile unit travels around a cell site in areas with many buildings, the omnidirectional
antenna will not duplicate the omnipattern. In addition, if the front-to-back ratio of a directional antenna is
found to be 20 dB in free space, it will be only 10 dB at the cell site. Antenna tilting can reduce the

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interference to the neighboring cells and enhance the weak spots in the cell. Also, the height of the cellsite antenna can affect the area and shape of the coverage in the system.
Switching Equipment:
The capacity of switching equipment in cellular systems is not based on the number of switch ports but on
the capacity of the processor associated with the switches. In a big cellular system, this processor should
be large. Also, because cellular systems are unlike other systems, it is important to consider when the
switching equipment would reach the maximum capacity. The service life of the switching equipment is
not determined by the life cycle of the equipment but by how long it takes to reach its full capacity. If the
switching equipment is designed in modules, or as distributed switches, more modules can be added to
increase the capacity of the equipment. For decentralized systems, digital switches may be more suitable.
The future trend seems to be the utilization of system handoff. This means that switching equipment can
link to other switching equipment so that a call can be carried from one system to another system without
the call being dropped.
Data Links:
The data links are shown in Fig 1. Although they are not directly affected by the cellular system, they are
important in the system. Each data link can carry multiple channel data (10 kbps data transmitted per
channel) from the cell site to the MTSO. This fast-speed data transmission cannot be passed through a
regular telephone line. Therefore, data bank devices are needed. They can be multiplexed, many-data
channels passing through a wideband T-carrier wire line or going through a microwave radio link where
the frequency is much higher than 850MHz. Leasing T1-carrier wire lines through telephone companies
can be costly. Although the use of microwaves may be a long-term money saver, the availability of the
microwave link has to be considered.

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2. Explain about NMT & NTT Systems.


Answer:
NTT: Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT) developed an 800-MHz land mobile
telephone system and put it into service in the Tokyo area in 1979. The general system operation is
similar to the AMPS system. It accesses approximately 40,000 subscribers in 500 cities. It covers 75
percent of all Japanese cities, 25 percent of inhabitable areas, and 60 percent of the population. In Japan, 9
automobile switching centers (ASCs), 51 mobile control stations (MCSs), 465 mobile base stations
(MBSs), and 39,000 mobile subscriber stations (MSSs) were in operation as of February 1985.

Fig.2 Japanese mobile telephone service network configuration


The Japanese mobile telephone service network configuration is shown in Fig.2. In the metropolitan
Tokyo area, about 30,000 subscribers are being served. The 1985 system operated over a spectrum of 30
MHz. The total number of channels was 600, and the channel bandwidth was 25 kHz. This system
comprised an automobile switching center (ASC), a mobile control station (MCS), a mobile base station
(MBS), and a mobile subscriber station (MSS). At present there is no competitive situation set up by the
government. However, the Japanese Ministry of Post and Telecommunication (MFT) is considering
providing a dual competitive situation similar to that in the United States.

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NMT: Nordic System: This system was built mostly by Scandinavian countries (Denmark, Norway,
Sweden, and Finland) in cooperation with Saudi Arabia and Spain and is called the NMT network. It is
currently a 450-MHz system. But an 800-MHz System will be implemented soon since the frequency
transparent concept as the AURORA 800 system is used to convert the 450-MHz system to the 800-MHz
System. The total bandwidth is 10 MHz, which has 200 channels with a bandwidth of 25 kHz per
channel. This system does have handoff and roaming capabilities. It also uses repeaters to increase the
coverage in a low traffic area. The total number of subscribers is around 100,000.

3. Explain the phenomena of severe fading?


Answer:
Severe Fading: If the antenna height of the mobile unit is lower than its typical surroundings, and the
carrier frequency wavelength is much less than the sizes of the surrounding structures, multipath waves
are generated. At the mobile unit, the sum of the multipath waves causes a signal-fading phenomenon.
The signal fluctuates in a range of about 40 dB (10 dB above and 30 dB below the average signal). We
can visualize the nulls of the fluctuation at the baseband at about every half wavelength in space, but all
nulls do not occur at the same level, as Fig.3 shows. If the mobile unit moves fast, the rate of fluctuation
is fast. For instance, at 850 MHz, the wavelength is roughly 0.35 m (1 ft). If the speed of the mobile unit
is 24 km/h (15 mi/h), or 6.7 m/s, the rate of fluctuation of the signal reception at a 10-dB level below the
average power of a fading signal is 15 nulls per second.

Fig.3 A typical fading signal received while the mobile unit is moving.
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4. Distinguish between the permanent splitting and dynamic splitting?


Answer: There are two kinds of cell-splitting techniques:

1. Permanent splitting: The installation of every new split cell has to be planned ahead of time; the
number of channels, the transmitted power, the assigned frequencies, the choosing of the cell-site
selection, and the traffic load consideration should all be considered. When ready, the actual service cutover should be set at the lowest traffic point, usually at midnight on a weekend. Hopefully, only a few
calls will be dropped because of this cut-over, assuming that the downtime of the system is within 2 h.

2. Dynamic splitting: This scheme is based on using the allocated spectrum efficiency in real time. The
algorithm for dynamically splitting cell sites is a tedious job, as we cannot afford to have one single cell
unused during cell splitting at heavy traffic hours.

Fig.4 Cell splitting

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5. What are the limitations of conventional mobile systems and how are they overcome by
cellular mobile systems?

Answer:

Limitations of conventional mobile telephone systems: One of many reasons for developing a cellular
mobile telephone system and deploying it in many cities is the operational limitations of conventional
mobile telephone systems: limited service capability, poor service performance, and inefficient frequency
spectrum utilization.

1. Limited service capability: A conventional mobile telephone system is usually designed by selecting
one or more channels from a specific frequency allocation for use in autonomous geographic zones, as
shown in Fig.5. The communications coverage area of each zone is normally planned to be as large as
possible, which means that the transmitted power should be as high as the federal specification allows.
The user who starts a call in one zone has to reinitiate the call when moving into a new zone because the
call will be dropped. This is an undesirable radio telephone system since there is no guarantee that a call
can be completed without a handoff capability. The handoff is a process of automatically changing
frequencies as the mobile unit moves into a different frequency zone so that the conversation can be
continued in a new frequency zone without redialing. Another disadvantage of the conventional system is
that the number of active users is limited to the number of channels assigned to a particular frequency
zone.

Fig.5 Conventional Mobile System

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Poor Service Performance: In the past, a total of 33 channels were all allocated to three mobile
telephone systems: Mobile Telephone Service (MTS), Improved Mobile Telephone Service (IMTS) MJ
systems, and Improved Mobile Telephone Service (IMTS) MK systems. MTS operates around 40 MHz
and MJ operates at 150 MHs; both provide 11 channels; IMTS MK operates at 450 MHz and provides 12
channels. These 33 channels must cover an area 50 mi in diameter. In 1976, New York City had 6
channels of( MJ serving 320 customers, with another 2400 customers on a waiting list. New York City
also had 6 channels of MK serving 225 customers, with another 1300 customers on a waiting list. The
large number of subscribers created a high blocking probability during busy hours. Although service
performance was undesirable, the demand was still great. A high-capacity system for mobile telephones
was needed.
Inefficient Frequency Spectrum Utilization: In a conventional mobile telephone system, the frequency
utilization measurement Mo, is defined as the maximum number of customers that could be served by one
channel at the busy hour.
Mo = Number of customers/channel
Mo = 53 for MJ
37 for MK
The offered load can then be obtained by
A = Average calling time (minutes) x total customers / 60 min (Erlangs)
Assume average calling time = 1.76 min.
A1 = 1.76 * 53 * 6 / 60 = 9.33 Erlangs

(MJ system)

A2 = 1.76 * 37 * 6 / 60 = 6.51 Erlangs

(MK system)

If the number of channels is 6 and the offered loads are A1 = 9.33 and A2 = 6.51, then from the Erlang B
model the blocking probabilities, B1 = 50 percent (MJ system) and B2 =30 percent (MK system),
respectively. It is likely that half the initiating calls will be blocked in the MJ system, a very high
blocking probability. As far as frequency spectrum utilization is concerned, the conventional system does
not utilize the spectrum efficiently since each channel can only serve one customer at a time in a whole
area. This is overcomed by the new cellular system.

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6. Explain about basic cellular system.


Answer:
Basic Cellular System: A basic cellular system consists of three parts: a mobile unit, a cell site, and a
mobile telephone switching office (MTSO), as Fig.6 shows, with connections to link the three sub
systems.
1. Mobile units: A mobile telephone unit contains a control unit, a transceiver, and an antenna system.

2. Cell site:

The cell site provides interface between the MTSO and the mobile units. it has a control

unit, radio cabinets, antennas, a power plant, and data terminals.

3. MTSO: The switching office, the central coordinating element for all cell sites, contains the cellular
processor and cellular switch. It interfaces with telephone company zone offices, controls call processing,
and handles billing activities.

4. Connections: The radio and high-speed data links connect the three subsystems. Each mobile unit can
only use one channel at a time for its communication link. But the channel is not fixed: it can be any one
in the entire band assigned by the serving area, with each site having multichannel capabilities that can
connect simultaneously to many mobile units.

The MTSO is the heart of the cellular mobile system. Its processor provides central coordination and
cellular administration. The cellular switch, which can be either analog or digital, switches calls to
connect mobile subscribers to other mobile subscribers and to the nationwide telephone network. It uses
voice trunks similar to telephone company interoffice voice trunks. It also contains data links providing
supervision links between the processor and the switch and between the cell sites and the processor. The
radio link carries the voice and signaling between the mobile unit and the cell site. The high-speed data
links cannot be transmitted over the standard telephone trunks and therefore must use either microwave
links or T-carriers (wire lines). Microwave radio links or T-carriers carry both voice and data between the
cell site and the MTSO.

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Fig.6 Basic cellular system

7. Explain the direct wave path, line of sight path, out of sight path, and obstructive path?
Answer:
A direct wave path is a path clear from the terrain contour. The line-of-sight path is a path clear from
buildings. In the mobile radio environment, we do not always have a line-of-sight condition. When a lineof-sight condition occurs, the average received signal at the mobile unit at a 1-mi intercept is higher,
although the 40 dB/dec path-loss slope remains the same. In this case the short-term fading is observed to
be a rician fading. It results from a strong line-of-sight path and a ground-reflected wave combined, plus
many weak building-reflected waves.

When an out-of-sight condition is reached, the 40-dB/dec path-loss slope still remains. However, all
reflected waves, including ground reflected waves and building-reflected waves, become dominant. The
short-term received signal at the mobile unit observes a Rayleigh fading. The Rayleigh fading is the most
severe fading. When the terrain contour blocks the direct wave path, we call it the obstructive path. In this
situation, the shadow loss from the signal reception can be found by using the knife-edge diffraction
curves.

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8. What are the dierent types of noises in cellular frequency ranges Explain in detail?

Answer:
Noise level in cellular frequency band: The thermal noise kTB at a temperature T of 290 K (17C) and
a bandwidth B of 30 kHz is -129 dBm, where k is Boltzmanns constant. Assume that the received
frontend noise is 9 dB, and then the noise level is -120 dBm.

There are two kinds of man-made noise, the ignition noise generated by the vehicles and the noise
generated by 800-MHz emissions.
The ignition noise: In the past, 800 MHz was not widely used. Therefore, the man-made noise at 800
MHz is merely generated by the vehicle ignition noise. The automotive noise introduced at 800 MHz with
a bandwidth of 30 kHz can be deduced from Fig.7.

Fig.7 Noise in Cellular Networks


The 800-MHz emission noise: As a result of the cellular mobile systems operating in all the major cities
in the United States and the spurious energy generated outside each channel bandwidth, the early noise
data measurements are no longer valid. The 800-MHz-emission noise can be measured at an idle channel
(a forward voice channel) in the 869- to 894-MHz region while the mobile receiver is operating on a car
battery in a no-traffic spot in a city. In this Case, no automotive ignition noise is involved and no channe1
operation is in the proximity of the idle-channel receiver. We found that in some areas the noise level is 2
to 3 dB higher than -120 dBm at the cell sites and 3 to 4 dB higher than -120 dBm at the mobile stations.

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Amplifier noise: A mobile radio signal received by a receiving antenna, either at the cell site or at the
mobile unit, will be amplified by an amplifier. We would like to understand bow the signal is affected by
the amplifier noise. Assume that the amplifier baa an available power gain g and the available noise
power at the output is N. The input signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio is Ps/Ni, the output signal-to-noise ratio is
Po/No, and the internal amplifier noise is Na. Then the output Po/No becomes

The noise figure F is defined as

Where, the maximum possible S/N ratio is measured when the load is an open circuit.
The noise figure of the amplifier is

The term kTB is the thermal noise. The noise figure is a reference measurement between a minimum
noise level due to thermal noise and the noise level generated by both the external and internal noise of an
amplifier.

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9. Explain about the marketing of hexagonal cells?


Answer:
Marketing Image of Hexagonal-shaped cells: The hexagonal-shaped communication cells are artificial
and that such a shape cannot be generated in the real world. Engineers draw hexagonal-shaped cell on a
layout to simplify the planning and design of a cellular system because it approaches a circular shape that
is the ideal power coverage area. The circular shapes have overlapped areas which make the drawing
unclear. The hexagonal-shaped cells fit the planned area nicely, as shown in Fig.8 with no gap and no
overlap between the hexagonal cells. The ideal cell shapes as well as the real cell shapes are also shown in
Fig.8.
A simple mechanism which makes the cellular system implement- able based on hexagonal cells will be
illustrated in later chapters. Otherwise, a statistical approach will be used in dealing with a real-world
situation. Fortunately, the outcomes resulting from these two approaches are very close, yet the latter does
not provide a clear physical picture, as shown later. Besides, today these hexagonal-shaped cells have
already become a widely promoted symbol for cellular mobile systems. An analysis using hexagonal
cells, if it is desired, can easily be adapted by the reader.

Fig.8 Hexagonal Cells and the real shapes of their coverages

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10. Dierentiate the generations in the cordless phones and cellular phones?
Answer:

Cellular Phones: In 1945 the Zero Generation (0G) of mobile telephones was introduced. 0G mobile
phones like mobile telephone service, were not cellular, and so did not feature handover from one base
station to the next and reuse of radio frequency channels. Like other technologies of the time it involved a
single powerful base station covering a wide area and each telephone would effectively monopolize a
channel over that whole area while in use. The concepts of frequency reuse and handoff as well as a
number of other concepts that formed the basis of modem cell phone technology arc first described in U
.S. patent 4.152.647 issued on May 1. 1979 to Charles A Gladden and Marlin H Parelman, and assigned
by them to the United States Government. This is the first embodiment of all the concepts that formed the
basis of the next major step in mobile telephony, the analog cellular telephone.
The first commercial city wide cellular network was launched in Japan by NTT in 1979. Fully automatic
cellular networks were first introduced in the early to mid 1980s (the 1G generation). The Nordic Mobile
Telephone (NMT) system went on-line in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden in 1981.
Personal Handy phone system and modems used in Japan around 1997-2003. In 1983, Motorola
DynaTAC was the first approved mobile phone by FCC in the United States. In 1984, Bell Labs
developed modern commercial cellular technology, which employed multiple, centrally controlled base
stations (cell sites), each providing service to a small area (a cell). The cell sites would be set up such that
cells partially overlapped. In a cellular system a signal between a base station (cell SIC) and a terminal
phone) only need, be s[ring enough to reach between the two, so the same channel can be used
simultaneously for separate conversations in different cells. The first modern network technology on
digital 20 (Second Generation) cellular technology was launched by Radiolinja in 199) in Finland on the
OSM standard which also marked the introduction of competition in mobile telecoms when Radiolinja
challenged incumbent Telecom Finland who ran a 1-G NMT network.
The first data services appeared on mobile phones starting with person-to-person SMS text messaging in
Finland in 1993. First trial payments using a mobile phone to pay for a Coca Cola vending machine were
set in Finland in 1998. The first commercial payment system to mimic banks and credit cards was
launched in the Philippines in 1999 simultaneously by mobile operators Glove and Smart. The first
content sold to mobile phones was the ringing tone, first launched in 1998 in Finland. The first full
Internet service on mobile phones was i-mode introduced by NTTs DoCoMo in Japan in 1999. In 2001

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the first commercial launch of 3G (third generation) was again in Japan by NTT DoCoMo on the
WCDMA standard.
Until the early 1990s, most mobile phones were too large to be carried in a Jacket pocket, so they were
typically installed in vehicles as car phones. With the miniaturization of digital components and
development of more sophisticated batteries, mobile phones have become smaller and lighter.
Cordless phones: George Sweigert an amateur radio operator and inventor from Cleveland Ohio, is
largely recognized as the father of the cordless phone. He submitted a patent application in 1966 for a
full duplex wireless communication apparatus. The U.S. patent and trademark office awarded him a
patent in June of 1969. Sweigert a radio operator in World War II stationed at the south pacific islands of
Guadalcanal and Bougainville, developed the full duplex-concept for untrained personnel, to improve
battlefield communications for senior commanders. He was also licensed as W8ZIS and N9LC in the
amateur radio service. He also held a first class radio telephone operators permit issued by the Federal
Communication Commission.
In the 1980s a number of manufacturers including Sony introduced cordless phones for the consumer
market. They used a base station that was connected to a telephone line and a handset with a microphone,
speaker, keypad and telescoping antenna. The handset contained a rechargeable battery typically NiCd.
The base unit is powered by household current via a wall socket. The base included a charging cradle,
which as generally a form of trickle charger, on which the handset rested when not in use. Some cordless
phones now utilize two rechargeable AA or AAA batteries in place of the more expensive traditional
proprietary telephone batteries.

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11. Briefly explain the evaluation of the analog and digital cellular mobile system?
Answer:
Cellular telephone systems can be Analog or Digital. Older Cellular Systems (AMPS, TACS, NMT)
are analog and newer systems (GSM, CDMA, PCS) are Digital.
The major difference between the two systems is how the voice signal is transmitted between the phone
and base station. Analog and Digital refer to this transmission mechanism. It is like audio cassettes and
CDs. Audio cassettes are analog and CDs are digital.
In either system, the audio at the microphone always starts out as a voltage level that varies continuously
over time. High frequencies cause rapid changes and low frequencies cause slow changes. With analog
system the audio is directly modulated on to a carrier. This is very much like FM (not identical) radio
where the audio signal is translated to the RF signal.
With digital systems, the audio is converted to digitized samples at about 8000 samples per second or so.
The digital samples are numbers that represent the time varying voltage level at specific points in time.
These samples are now transmitted as 1s and 0s. At the other end the samples are converted back to
voltage levels and smoothed out so that you get about the same audio signal.
With analog transmissions, interference (RF noise or some other anomaly that affects the transmitted
signal) gets translated directly in to the recovered signal and there is no check that the received signal is
authentic. The neat thing about the digital is that the 1s and 0s cannot be easily confused or distorted
during transmission plus extra data is typically included in the transmission to help, detect and correct any
errors.

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12. Write notes on Digital Cellular System.


Answer:
Digital Cellular System: Digital cellular systems are the cellular systems that use the digital
communication techniques like in modulation, transmission format and demodulation and so on. The
characteristics of these systems are

1. These offer an effective data transmission compared to the conventional analog cellular systems. These
systems employ the packet switched communication technique which is faster than the circuit switching
technique.
2. These systems employ powerful error detection and Correction techniques, which can country the
debilitating effect of noise, fading and interference on the signal.
3. These systems also provide the security on transmitting data through encryption and decryption
techniques authentication.
4. These systems also require very less transmit power, this properly increases the battery life (in portable
mobile units).
5. The range of services provided by the digital cellular system is quite large compared to that provided
by the analog cellular systems.
6. The speed of services provided by digital systems is quite high and thus, they support high capacity
data transfers.
7. The digital cellular systems employ TDMA technique for communication.

Some examples of the digital cellular systems are:


(i)

GSM

(ii)

NA-TDMA (North American TDMA)

(iii)

CDMA

(iv)

PDC

(v)

1800-DCS.

In 1992, the first digital cellular system, GSM was developed in Germany. GSM is a European standard
system. In the United States, an NA-TDMA system and a CDMA system have been developed. A
Japanese system, PDC (Personal Digital Cellular) was deployed in Osaka in June 1994.

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13. Explain the Trunking Efficiency.


Answer:
Trunking Efficiency: To explore the trunking efficiency degradation inherent in licensing two or more
carriers rather than one, compare the trunking efficiency between one cellular system per market
operating 666 channels and two cellular systems per market each operating 333 channels. Assume that all
frequency channels are evenly divided into seven subareas called cells. In each cell, the blocking
probability of 0.02 is assumed. Also the average calling time is assumed to be 1.76 min.
With N1=666/7 = 95 and B= 0.02 to obtain the offered load A1 =83.1 and with N2=333/7=47.5 and
B=0.02 to obtain A2= 38. Since two carriers each operating 333 channels are considered, the total offered
load is 2A. We then realize that

By converting above eqn. to the number of users who can be served in a busy hour, the average calling
time of 1.76 mm is introduced. The number of calls per hour served in a cell can be expressed as

Fig. 9 Degradation of trunking efficiency


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The trunking efficiency factor can be calculated as

For a blocking probability of 2 percent, Figure 13 shows, by comparing one carrier per market with more
than one carrier per market situations with different blocking Probability conditions. The degradation of
trunking efficiency decreases as the blocking probability increases. As the number of carriers per market
increases the degradation increases. However, when a high percentage of blocking probability, say more
than 20 percent, occurs, the performance of one carrier per market is already so poor that further
degradation becomes insignificant, as Fig.9 shows.
For a 2 percent blocking probability, the trunking efficiency of one carrier per market does show a greater
advantage when compared to other scenarios.

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14. Explain about the model of transmission medium.


Answer:
Model of transmission medium: A mobile radio signal r(t), illustrated in Fig.14, can be artificially
characterized by two components m(t) and r(t) based on natural physical phenomena.
r(t) = m(t) ro(t)
The component m(t) is called local mean, long-term fading, or lognormal fading and its variation is due to
the terrain contour between the base station and the mobile unit. The factor r0 is called multipath fading,
short term fading, or Rayleigh fading and its variation is due to the waves reflected from the surrounding
buildings and other structures. The long-term fading m(t) can be obtained from Eq. below

Where 2T is the time interval for averaging r(t). T can be determined based on the fading rate of r(t),
usually 40 to 80 fades. Therefore, m(t) is the envelope of r(t), as shown in Fig.10. Equation also can be
expressed in spatial scale as

The length of 2L has been determined to be 20 to 40 wavelengths. Using 36 or up to 50 samples in an


interval of 40 wavelengths is an adequate averaging process for obtaining the local means.

The factor m(t) or m(x) is also found to be a lognormal distribution based on its characteristics caused by
the terrain contour. The short- term fading r0 is obtained by

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The factor ro(t) follows a Rayleigh distribution, assuming that only reflected waves from local
surroundings are the ones received (a normal situation for the mobile radio environment). Therefore, the
term Rayleigh fading is often used.

Fig.10 A mobile radio signal fading representation.

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15. Explain about planning of cellular system in detail.


Answer:
How to start planning: Assume that the construction permit for a cellular system in a particular market
area is granted, the planning stage becomes critical. A great deal of money can be spent and yet poor
service may be provided if we do not know how to create a good plan. First, we have to determine two
elements: regulations and the market situation.
Regulations: The federal regulations administered by the FCC are the same throughout the United
States. The state regulations may be different from state to state, and each city and town may have its own
building codes and zoning laws. Become familiar with the rules and regulations. Sometimes waivers need
to be applied for ahead of time. Be sure that the plan is workable.
Market situation: There are three tasks to be handled by the marketing department.
1. Prediction of gross income: We have to determine the population, average income, business types, and
business zones so that the gross income can be predicted.
2. Understanding competitors: We also need to know the competitors situation, coverage, system
performance, and number of customers. Any system should provide a unique and outstanding service to
overcome the competition.
3. Decision of geographic coverage: What general area should ultimately be covered? What near-term
service can be provided in a limited area? These questions should be answered and the decisions passed
on to the engineering department.
The engineers role: The engineers follow the market decisions by
1. Initiating a cellular mobile service in a given area by creating a plan that uses a minimum number of
cell sites to cover the whole area. It is easy for marketing to request but hard for the engineers to fulfill.
2. Checking the areas that marketing indicated were important revenue areas. The number of radios
(number of voice channels) required to handle the traffic load at the busy hours should be determined.
3. Studying the interference problems, such as co-channel and adjacent channel interference, and the inter
modulation products gene rated at the cell sites, and finding ways to reduce them.
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4. Studying the blocking probability of each call at each cell site, and trying to minimize it.
5. Planning to absorb more new customers. The rate at which new customers subscribe to a system can
vary depending on the service charges, system performance, and seasons of the year. Engineering has to
try to develop new technologies to utilize fully the limited spectrum assigned to the cellular system. The
analysis of spectrum efficiency due to the natural limitations may lead to a request for a larger spectrum.

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