I
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INTRODUCTION
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Wireless Communications,
various telecommunications systems that use radio waves to carry signals and
messages across distances. Wireless communications systems include cellular
telephones, pagers, radio telegraphs, satellite telephones, laptop computers,
personal digital assistants (PDAs), shortwave radios, and two-way radios. They
are used primarily to transmit private communications. Commercial radio and
television are also wireless telecommunications systems, but radio and
television are mainly public broadcast services rather than private
communications systems (see Radio and Television Broadcasting). This
article focuses on wireless communications systems that are used primarily for
private communications.
Wireless communications
allow people greater flexibility while communicating, because they do not need
to remain at a fixed location, such as a home or office, but instead can
communicate with other people while traveling in a car or walking along a
street. Wireless technologies make communications services more readily
available than traditional wire-based services (such as ordinary telephones),
which require the installation of wires in fixed locations. Wireless
communications devices are useful in places where communications services are
only temporarily needed, such as at outdoor festivals or large sporting events.
These technologies are also useful for communicating in remote locations, such
as mountains, jungles, or deserts, where wire-based telephone service might not
exist. Police, fire, and other emergency departments use wireless devices, such
as two-way radio, to communicate information between vehicles that are already
responding to emergency calls. Construction and utility workers frequently use
handheld radios for short-range communication and coordination. Many
businesspeople use wireless devices, such as cellular radio telephones, also
known as cell phones, to stay in contact with colleagues and clients while
traveling. Increasingly, people are using wireless devices for a variety of
everyday purposes, such as scheduling appointments, arranging meeting places,
shopping for food, or agreeing on home video selections while in a video store.
All wireless
communications devices use radio waves to transmit and receive signals. These
devices operate on different radio frequencies so that signals from one device
will not overlap and interfere with nearby transmissions from other devices.
The number of companies offering wireless communications services has grown
steadily in recent years. For example, in 1988 about 500 companies offered cell
phone services. By 2001 that number had grown to more than 2,500 companies
serving about 120 million subscribers. Currently, telecommunications companies
throughout the world are activating more wireless service subscriptions than
they are conventional wire-based service subscriptions. Wireless communication
is becoming increasingly popular because of the convenience and mobility it
affords; the expanded availability of radio frequencies for transmitting, which
makes it possible to handle a larger volume of calls; and improvements in
technology, which have added other services such as Internet access and
improved the clarity of voice transmissions.
II
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PRINCIPLES OF WIRELESS
COMMUNICATIONS
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Wireless communications
begin with a message that is converted into an electronic signal by a device
called a transmitter. There are two types of transmitters: analog and digital.
An analog transmitter sends electronic signals as modulated radio waves. The
analog transmitter modulates the radio wave to carry the electronic signal and
then sends the modified radio signal through space. A digital transmitter
encodes electronic signals by converting messages into a binary code, the
series of zeros and ones that are the basis of all computer programming. The
encoded electronic signal is then sent as a radio wave. Devices known as
receivers decode or demodulate the radio waves and reproduce the original
message over a speaker.
Wireless communications
provide more flexibility than wire-based means of communication. However, there
are some drawbacks. Wireless communications are limited by the range of the
transmitter (how far a signal can be sent), and since radio waves travel
through the atmosphere they can be disturbed by electrical interferences (such
as lightning) that cause static.
Wireless communications
systems involve either one-way transmissions, in which a person merely receives
notice of a message, or two-way transmissions, such as a telephone conversation
between two people. An example of a device that only receives one-way
transmission is a pager, which is a high-frequency radio receiver. When a
person dials a pager number, the pager company sends a radio signal to the
desired pager. The encoded signal triggers the pager’s circuitry and notifies
the customer carrying the pager of the incoming call with a tone or a
vibration, and often the telephone number of the caller. Advanced pagers can
display short messages from the caller, or provide news updates or sports
scores.
Two-way transmissions
require both a transmitter and a receiver for sending and receiving signals. A
device that functions as both a transmitter and a receiver is called a
transceiver. Cellular radio telephones and two-way radios use transceivers, so
that back-and-forth communication between two people can be maintained. Early
transceivers were very large, but they have decreased in size due to advances
in technology. Fixed-base transceivers, such as those used at police stations,
can fit on a desktop, and hand-held transceivers have shrunk in size as well.
Several current models of handheld transceivers weigh less than 0.2 kg (0.5
lb). Some pagers also use transceivers to provide limited response options.
These brief return-communication opportunities allow paging users to
acknowledge reception of a page and to respond using a limited menu of options.
III
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WIRELESS COMMUNICATION
MODES
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Wireless communications
systems have grown and changed as technology has improved. Several different
systems are used today, all of which operate on different radio frequencies.
New technologies are being developed to provide greater service and
reliability.
A
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Sea and Air
Transceivers
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The first wireless
communications devices were radio telegraphs. A telegraph is a device that
sends simple electrical pulses along copper wires or through the air as radio
waves. The pulses were caused by contact between two metal surfaces, and
receivers interpreted these electrical pulses as tones or beeps. A code of long
and short signals was developed to represent the letters of the alphabet (see
Morse Code, International), and in this way coded messages could be sent
between telegraphs. Radio telegraphs used radio waves rather than wire telegraph
lines to send and receive messages. Radio telegraphs sent telegraph signals
over long distances and were ideal for ship-to-shore communication. Bulky radio
telegraphs were installed on ships as early as 1899 and were widely used by
1905.
Maritime and aviation
telecommunications systems now use high-frequency radios and satellites capable
of transmitting speech and text, rather than wireless telegraphy, to send
messages. Aircraft pilots use radios to communicate with air traffic
controllers at airports and also to communicate with other pilots. Navigation
beacons are equipped with transmitters that send automated signals to help
ships and aircraft in distress determine their positions. While high-frequency
radio can transmit signals over long distances, the quality of these signals
can be diminished by bad weather or by electrical interference in the
atmosphere, which is often caused by radiation from the Sun.
B
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Handheld Radio
Transceivers
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Police, fire, and other
emergency organizations, as well as the military, have used two-way wireless
radio communication since the 1930s. Early vehicle-based radios were large,
heavy units. After the invention of the transistor in 1948, radios shrank in
size to small handheld radio transceivers. Public two-way radios with several
frequency options are widely available as well. Usually limited in range to a
few miles, these units are great aids for such mobile professionals as
construction workers, film crews, event planners, and security personnel.
Simpler two-way radios, called walkie-talkies, have been popular children’s
toys for years. Most walkie-talkies broadcast on channel 14 of the citizens
band (CB), a range of frequencies grouped into channels and allocated for
public use. CB radios can transmit and receive on 40 different channels. An
unlicensed radio service, the Family Radio Service, allows individuals to use
high-frequency wireless devices with a range of up to 3.2 km (2 mi).
C
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Shortwave Transceivers
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Long-range broadcast
services and frequencies, in what is known as the shortwave radio band (with
frequencies of 3 to 30 megahertz), are available for amateur or ham radio
operators. Shortwave radio broadcasts can travel long distances because of the
concentration of ionized, or electrically charged, particles in the layer of
the atmosphere known as the ionosphere. The ionoshere reflects radio signals,
so that signals transmitted upward are reflected back to the surface of Earth.
This skipping of waves against the ionosphere can greatly increase the range of
the transmitter. These broadcasts can travel thousands of kilometers. Under
certain conditions and on special “clear channel” frequencies, listeners of AM
radio can receive a signal from several time zones away. Shortwave radio
listeners sometimes can receive signals from the other side of the world. The
degree of reflectivity of the ionosphere depends on the time of day. During
daylight hours, the ionosphere has the concentration of ions necessary for
reflecting radio waves only at the higher frequencies of the shortwave band. At
night, the ionosphere has the concentration necessary for reflecting lower
frequencies within the lower parts of the shortwave band. If there is an
inadequate concentration of ions, the radio waves simply continue through the
ionosphere into space.
D
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Cellular Radio
Telephones
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Cellular radio
telephones, or cell phones, combine their portable radio capability with the
wired, or wire-based, telephone network to provide mobile users with access to
the rest of the public telephone system used by nonmobile callers. An early
form of radio telephone communicated with a single powerful antenna within a
given geographic or metropolitan area. This large antenna was wired to the
telephone system. With only one antenna for a large metro area, this limited
the number of frequencies that could be used, because radio telephone
frequencies would often overlap and cause interference. As a result, only a
limited number of simultaneous calls could be handled, because only a small
block of channels could be generated over the available radio spectrum
allocated for the service. Modern cellular telephones use a network of several
short-range antennas known as towers that connect to the telephone system.
Because the antennas have a shorter range and cover a smaller area, often as
short as 1.5 to 2.4 km (1.0 to 1.5 mi), frequencies can be reused a short
distance away without overlapping and causing interference.
Cell phone towers pick
up requests from cell phones for a dial tone and also deliver inbound calls to
the appropriate cell phone or deliver calls to people using regular telephones
on the wire-based system. To do any of these things, the cell phone must have a
singular identity that can be recognized by computers housed in a central
mobile telephone switching office (MTSO). When a cell phone is turned on, it
connects by radio waves to the nearest cell tower (tower receiving the
strongest signal). The cell towers are spaced so their receiving ranges
slightly overlap. This continuous contact makes it possible for the MTSO to
transfer a call from tower to tower as a mobile cell phone user (in a moving
vehicle, for instance) moves from one cell area to another.
E
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Satellite
Communications
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Satellite communications
services connect users directly to the telephone network from almost anywhere
in the world. Special telephones are available to consumers that communicate
directly with communications satellites orbiting Earth. The satellites transmit
these signals to ground stations that are connected to the telephone system.
These satellite services, while more expensive than cellular or other wireless
services, give users access to the telephone network in areas of the world
where no wired or cellular telephone service exists. Satellite phones are also
able to deliver video images through videophones that use tiny cameras and
transmit their images via the satellite phone.
F
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Radio Modems
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Wi-Fi, an abbreviation
for wireless fidelity, is a wireless communication technology that can provide
connections between portable computers and wired connections to the Internet.
To connect users with the Internet, Wi-Fi devices use low-power transmitters
and receivers equipped with special computer chips containing radio modems. The
chips can be installed in laptop computers, personal digital assistants (PDAs),
and cellular telephones.
Radio modems provide the
same functions as modems that operate with conventional wire-based networks:
They modulate and demodulate signals to mimic digital bitstreams, the same
format used by computers. Wi-Fi-equipped computers, cell phones, and PDAs
provide mobile, wireless access to e-mail and Internet sites. The radio modems
must be in range of a Wi-Fi device containing a transmitter and receiver that
is connected to a landline providing Internet access. Areas within range of a
Wi-Fi transmitter and receiver are known as hot spots.
Current technical
standards limit the range to distances of about 90 m (300 ft). Many
transmitters, however, can be linked to cover a wider area, such as an airport
or hotel. Current Wi-Fi standards enable data to be sent at high speeds ranging
from 11 to 54 megabits per second. This is known as a broadband connection
because a vast amount of data can be sent quickly. A new technology known as
WiMax promises to extend the range of a transmitter and receiver to about 48 km
(30 mi). The WiMax technology also expands the capabilities of broadband
connections by enabling users to remain connected to Internet hot spots even
when traveling in an automobile or train at speeds up to 250 km/h (155 mph).
G
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Ultrawideband (UWB)
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Wi-Fi may eventually
give way to another radio technology known as ultrawideband (UWB), according to
some experts. Unlike Wi-Fi, UWB does not use a single radio frequency but sends
its radio signals in short pulses across the entire radio spectrum. This
technology reduces interference and enables UWB to send larger amounts of data
than Wi-Fi. UWB is expected to be used to connect all types of electronic
equipment within a home without the use of wires. For example, stereo speakers
could be connected to a high-definition television set, and the television
could receive signals from a DVD player, and the DVD player could be connected
to a personal computer, and all these connections could be done wirelessly.
A single standard for
UWB technology was approved in March 2005 by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC). The single standard was expected to end a standoff between
various industry groups and lead to faster implementation of UWB technology.
Devices using UWB technology could reach the marketplace by 2006, according to
some predictions.
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