How cellphones work
Walking and talking, working on the
train, always in contact, never out of touch—cellphones have dramatically
changed the way we live and work. No one knows exactly how many little plastic
handsets there are in the world, but the best guess is over 4.6 billion. That's
around two thirds of the planet's population! In developing countries, where
large-scale land line networks (ordinary telephones
wired to the wall) are few and far between, over 90 percent of the phones in
use are cellphones. Cellphones (also known as cellular phones and, chiefly in
Europe, as mobile phones or mobiles) are radio
telephones that route their calls through a network of masts linked to the main
public telephone network. Here's how they work.
Photo: A typical Nokia cellular
phone. Back in the 1990s, cellphones like this were merely used for making
voice calls. Now networks are faster and capable of handling greater volumes of
traffic, cellphones are increasingly used as portable communication centers,
capable of doing all the things you can do with a telephone, digital camera,
MP3 player, and laptop computer.
Cellphones
use wireless technology
Although they do the same job, land
lines and cellphones work in a completely different way. Land lines carry calls
along electrical cables. Cut out all the satellites,
fiber-optic cables, switching offices, and other
razzmatazz, and land lines are not that much different to the toy phones you
might have made out of a piece of string and a couple of baked bean cans. The
words you speak ultimately travel down a direct, wired connection between two
handsets. What's different about a cellphone is that it can send and receive
calls without wire connections of any kind. How does it do this? By using electromagnetic radio waves to send and receive
the sounds that would normally travel down wires.
Whether you're sitting at home,
walking down the street, driving a car,
or riding in a train, you're bathing in a sea of electromagnetic waves. TV
and radio programs, signals from radio-controlled cars, cordless phone calls, and
even wireless doorbells—all these things work using electromagnetic energy:
undulating patterns of electricity and magnetism
that zip and zap invisibly through space at the speed of light (300,000 km or
186,000 miles per second). Cellphones are by far the fastest growing source of
electromagnetic energy in the world around us.
Photo: Phones to go: you can use a
mobile phone wherever you can get a signal. Photo by Tammy Grider courtesy of
US Air Force.
How
cellphone calls travel
When you speak into a cellphone, a
tiny microphone in the handset converts the
up-and-down sounds of your voice into a corresponding up-and-down pattern of
electrical signals. A microchip inside the phone turns these signals
into strings of numbers. The numbers are packed up into a radio wave and beamed
out from the phone's antenna (in some countries, the antenna is called
an aerial). The radio wave races through the air at the speed of light until it
reaches the nearest cellphone mast.
The mast receives the signals and
passes them on to its base station, which effectively coordinates what happens
inside each local part of the cellphone network, which is called a cell. From
the base station, the calls are routed onward to their destination. Calls made
from a cellphone to another cellphone on the same network travel to their
destination by being routed to the base station nearest to the destination
phone, and finally to that phone itself. Calls made to a cellphone on a
different network or a land line follow a more lengthy path. They may have to
be routed into the main telephone network before they can reach their ultimate
destination.
Photo: Engineers repair a cellphone
mast. Photo by Brien Aho courtesy of US Navy.
How
cellphone masts help
At first glance, cellphones seem a
lot like two-way radios and walkie talkies, where each person has a radio
(containing both a sender and a receiver) that bounces messages back and forth
directly, like tennis players returning a ball. The problem with radios like
this is that you can only use so many of them in a certain area before the
signals from one pair of callers start interfering with those from other pairs
of callers. That's why cellphones are much more sophisticated—and work in a
completely different way.
A cellphone handset contains a radio
transmitter, for sending radio signals onward from the phone, and a radio
receiver, for receiving incoming signals from other phones. The radio
transmitter and receiver are not very high-powered, which means cellphones
cannot send signals very far. That's not a flaw— it's a deliberate feature of
their design! All a cellphone has to do is communicate with its local mast and
base station; what the base station has to do is pick up faint signals from
many cellphones and route them onward to their destination, which is why the
masts are huge, high-powered antennas (often mounted on a hill or tall
building). If we didn't have masts, we'd need cellphones with enormous antennas
and giant power supplies—and they'd be too cumbersome to be mobile. A cellphone
automatically communicates with the nearest cell (the one with the strongest
signal) and uses as little power to do so as it possibly can (which makes its
battery last as long as possible and reduces the likelihood of it interfering
with other phones nearby).
What
cells do
So why bother with cells? Why don't
cellphones simply talk to one another directly? Suppose several people in your
area all want to use their cellphones at the same time. If their phones all
send and receive calls in the same way, using the same kind of radio waves, the
signals would interfere and scramble together and it would be impossible to
tell one call from another. One way to get around this is to use different
radio waves for different calls. If each phone call uses a slightly different frequency
(the number of up-and-down undulations in a radio wave in one second), the
calls are easy to keep separate. They can travel through the air like different
radio stations that use different wavebands.
That's fine if there are only a few
people calling at once. But suppose you're in the middle of a big city and
millions of people are all calling at once. Then you'd need just as many
millions of separate frequencies—more than are usually available. The solution
is to divide the city up into smaller areas, with each one served by its own
masts and base station. These areas are what we call cells and they look like a
patchwork of invisible hexagons. Each cell has its base station and masts and
all the calls made or received inside that cell are routed through them. Cells
enable the system to handle many more calls at once, because each cell uses the
same set of frequencies as its neighboring cells. The more cells, the greater
the number of calls that can be made at once. This is why urban areas have many
more cells than rural areas and why the cells in urban areas are much smaller.
How
cellphone cells handle calls
This picture shows two ways in which
cells work.
Simple
call
If a phone in cell A calls a phone
in cell B, the call doesn't pass directly between the phones, but from the
first phone to mast A and its base station, then to mast B and its base
station, and then to the second phone.
Roaming
call
Cellphones that are moving between
cells (when people are walking along or driving) are regularly sending signals
to and from nearby masts so that, at any given time, the cellphone network
always knows which mast is closest to which phone.
If a car passenger is making a call
and the car drives between cells C, D, and E, the phone call is automatically
"handed off" (passed from cell to cell) so the call is not
interrupted.
The key to understanding cells is to
realize that cellphones and the masts they communicate with are designed to
send radio waves only over a limited range; that effectively defines the size
of the cells. It's also worth pointing out that this picture is a
simplification; it's more accurate to say that the masts sit at the intersections
of the cells, but it's a little easier to understand things as I've shown them.
Types
of cellphones
The first mobile phones used analog technology. This is pretty much how baked-bean
can telephones work too. When you talk on a baked-bean can phone, your voice
makes the string vibrate up and down (so fast that you can't see it). The
vibrations go up and down like your voice. In other words, they are an analogy
of your voice—and that's why we call this analog technology. Some land lines
still work in this way today.
Most cellphones work using digital
technology: they turn the sounds of your voice into a pattern of numbers
(digits) and then beam them through the air. Using digital technology has many
advantages. It means cellphones can be used to send and receive computerized
data. That's why most cellphones can now send and receive text (SMS) messages, Web pages, MP3 music files, and digital photos. Digital
technology means cellphone calls can be encrypted
(scrambled using a mathematical code) before they leave the sender's phone, so
eavesdroppers cannot intercept them. (This was a big problem with earlier
analog phones, which anyone could intercept with a miniature radio receiver
called a scanner.) That makes digital cellphones much more secure.
The
world of cellphones
Cellphones are changing the way the
world connects. In the early 1990s, only one per cent of the world's population
owned a cellphone; today nearly a quarter of people make their phone calls this
way. In developing countries, there are on average only five telephones (either
land lines or cellphones) per hundred people and cellphones are much more
popular; in Cambodia, over 90 percent of all phones are cellphones.
Cellphones are also used in
different ways around the world. In the United States, mobiles are still mostly
used for voice conversations. In Europe, more people send "texts"
(text messages, also known as SMS) from mobile phones than use the Internet
on personal computers. In Asia, where high-speed
"third-generation" (3G) mobile networks and cutting-edge phones are
more widely available, more people surf the Web and send emails from mobile
phones than in any other way; over a quarter of all Japanese people now use the
Internet like this. Since the arrival of high-end cellphones (such as iPhones
and Android phones), lots of people now go online by tapping their phones—and
"cellphones" have now effectively become fully fledged pocket
computers.
Cellphones
and mobile broadband
If you want to find out how
cellphone networks have evolved from purely voice networks to form an important
part of the Internet, please see our separate article on mobile broadband. It also covers all those
confusing acronyms like FDMA, TDMA, CDMA, WCDMA, and HSDPA/HSPA.
Photo: Mobile broadband with a USB modem
is an increasingly popular form of wireless Internet.
Do
cellphones harm your health?
Photo: A simple, modern Nokia 106
cellphone from 2014. New phones like this generally operate at lower power than
older ones, producing less electromagnetic radiation and (theoretically) less
risk to health.
People have been asking that
question pretty much since cellphones first appeared—and the debate has
intensified over the last decade or so. Why is it even an issue? As we
discovered up above, cellphones communicate using radio waves, and we've all
been bathing in massive doses of those things since radio and TV became popular
in the early part of the 20th century. But the long-wave radio waves used in
broadcasting are very different from the short-wavelength, high-frequency,
high-energy radio waves at the opposite end of the electromagnetic spectrum. Generally speaking, the
shorter the wavelength of radio waves the more dangerous they are to our
health. That's why we take great care with the safety of microwave ovens and X
ray machines.
The trouble with cellphones is that
they use waves that are on the border between the safer, long-wavelength radio
waves and the unsafer, short-wavelength ones. Although the waves they use are
defined as microwaves, they're longer wavelength, lower frequency, and lower
energy waves than the ones used in microwave ovens.
Cancer
risk?
So do cellphones "cook your
brain" or "give you cancer"? It's very difficult to answer that
question conclusively. Proving a link between environmental "risk
factors" and cancers of various kinds is very difficult when people are
exposed to many different risks over their lifetime and cancers can develop
years or even decades in the future; cellphones are still a relatively new
technology so there isn't really enough data to go on.
What's the best guess on the safety
of cellphones? In 2010, a large international study of over 5000 brain tumor
cases called Interphone (coordinated by the International Agency for Research
on Cancer, IARC, in Lyon) revealed that there was no increased risk of brain
tumors for average cellphone use, though very heavy users of cellphones (30
minutes a day for a decade) did seem to be at greater risk. In May 2011, the
World Health Organization also published its view that the electromagnetic
fields produced by cellphones are "possibly carcinogenic to humans,"
which means there is a "credible" link but "chance, bias or
confounding cannot be ruled out with reasonable confidence." Two months
later, a team of "expert" scientists from the Institute of Cancer
Research concluded: "Although there remains some uncertainty, the trend in
the accumulating evidence is increasingly against the hypothesis that mobile
phone use can cause brain tumors in adults." The position is less certain
for mobile phone use in children and adolescents, though a number of studies
are now underway.
Find
out more
Studies
- Electromagnetic fields and public health: mobile phones: World Health Organization, Fact Sheet Number 193, June 2011.
- Interphone study reports on mobile phone use and brain cancer risk: International Agency for Research on Cancer, Press Release Number 200, 17 May 2010. [PDF format]
- Expert Independent Panel Reviews Mobile Phone Link to Brain Tumours: The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR), 2 July 2011.
- Mobile phone radiation and health: This Wikipedia article is quite a good survey of all the recent research on the topic.
News
reports
- Mobile phone study finds no solid link to brain tumours by Ian Sample, The Guardian, 17 May 2010. Reviews the background to the Interphone study.
- Mobile phones 'unlikely' to cause cancer by James Gallagher, BBC News, 2 July 2011. Reports the views of the ICR panel.
Who
invented cellphones?
How did we get from land lines to
cellphones? Here's a quick history:
- 1873: British physicist James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879) published the theory of electromagnetism, explaining how how electricity can make magnetism and vice-versa. Read more about his work in our main article on magnetism.
- 1876: Scottish-born inventor Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922) developed the first telephone while living in the United States (though there is some dispute about whether he was actually the original inventor). Later, Bell developed something called a "photophone" that would send and receive phone calls using light beams. Since it was conceived as a wireless phone, it was really a distant ancestor of the modern mobile phone.
- 1888: German physicist Heinrich Hertz (1857–1894) made the first electromagnetic radio waves in his lab.
- 1894: British physicist Sir Oliver Lodge (1851–1940) sent the first message using radio waves in Oxford, England.
- 1899: Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi (1874–1937) sent radio waves across the English Channel. By 1901. Marconi had sent radio waves across the Atlantic, from Cornwall in England to Newfoundland. Marconi is remembered as the father of radio, but pioneers such as Hertz and Lodge were no less important.
- 1906: American engineer Reginald Fessenden (1866–1932) became the first person to transmit the human voice using radio waves. He sent a message 11 miles from a transmitter at Brant Rock, Massachusetts to ships with radio receivers in the Atlantic Ocean.
- 1920s: Emergency services began to experiment with cumbersome radio telephones.
- 1940s: Mobile radio telephones started to become popular with emergency services and taxis.
- 1946: AT&T and Southwestern Bell introduced their Mobile Telephone System (MTS) for sending radio calls between vehicles.
- 1960s: Bell Laboratories (Bell Labs) developed Metroliner mobile cellphones on trains.
- 1973: Martin Cooper (1928–) of Motorola made the first cellphone call using his 28-lb prototype DynaTAC phone.
- 1975: Cooper and his colleagues were granted a patent for their radio telephone system. Their original design is shown in the artwork you can see here.
- 1978: Analog Mobile Phone System (AMPS) was introduced in Chicago by Illinois Bell and AT&T.
- 1982: European telephone companies agreed a worldwide standard for how cellphones will operate, which was named Groupe Speciale Mobile and later Global System for Mobile (GSM) telecommunications.
- 1984: Motorola DynaTAC became the world's first commercial handheld cellphone. Take a look at a picture of Martin Cooper and his DynaTAC!
- 1995: GSM and a similar system called PCS (Personal Communications Services) were adopted in the United States.
- 2001: GSM had captured over 70 percent of the world cellphone market.
- 2000s: Third-generation (3G and 3.5G) cellphones were launched, featuring faster networks, Internet access, music downloads, and many more advanced features based on digital technology.
- 2007: Apple's iPhone revolutionized the world of cellphones, packing what is effectively a touch-controlled miniature computer into a gadget the same since as a conventional cellular phone.
- 2011: World Health Organization published view that cellphones are "possibly carcinogenic" to humans.
Photo: Martin Cooper's original
radio telephone system (cellphone) design, submitted as a patent application in
1973. Note how the mobile part forms an entirely separate system (shown in
blue, on the right) that communicates with the existing public network (shown
on the left in red). Individual cellphones (turquoise on the extreme right)
communicate with their nearest masts and base stations using radio waves
(yellow zig-zags). Patent drawing courtesy of US Patent and Trademark Office.
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