There are a number of elements to the GSM radio or air interface. There are the aspects of the physical power levels, channels and the like. Additionally there are the different data channels that are employed to carry the data and exchange the protocol messages that enable the radio subsystem to operate correctly.
Basic signal characteristics
The GSM system uses digital TDMA technology combined with a channel bandwidth of 200 kHz. Accordingly the system is able to offer a higher level of spectrum efficiency that that which was achieved with the previous generation of analogue systems. As there are many carrier frequencies that are available, one or more can be allocated to each base station. The system also operates using Frequency Division Duplex and as a result, paired bands are needed for the up and downlink transmissions. The frequency separation is dependent upon the band in use.
The carrier is modulated using Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK). GMSK was used for the GSM system because it is able to provide features required for GSM. It is resilient to noise when compared to some other forms of modulation, it occupies a relatively narrow bandwidth, and it has a constant power level.
The data transported by the carrier serves up to eight different users under the basic system. Even though the full data rate on the carrier is approximately 270 kbps, some of this supports the management overhead, and therefore the data rate allotted to each time slot is only 24.8 kbps. In addition to this error correction is required to overcome the problems of interference, fading and the like. This means that the available data rate for transporting the digitally encoded speech is 13 kbps for the basic vocoders.
Power levels
A variety of power levels are allowed by the GSM standard, the lowest being only 800 mW (29 dBm). As mobiles may only transmit for one eighth of the time, i.e. for their allocated slot which is one of eight, the average power is an eighth of the maximum.
Additionally, to reduce the levels of transmitted power and hence the levels of interference, mobiles are able to step the power down in increments of 2 dB from the maximum to a minimum 13 dBm (20 milliwatts). The mobile station measures the signal strength or signal quality (based on the Bit Error Rate), and passes the information to the BTS and hence to the BSC, which ultimately decides if and when the power level should be changed.
A further power saving and interference reducing facility is the discontinuous transmission (DTx) capability that is incorporated within the specification. It is particularly useful because there are long pauses in speech, for example when the person using the mobile is listening, and during these periods there is no need to transmit a signal. In fact it is found that a person speaks for less than 40% of the time during normal telephone conversations. The most important element of DTx is the Voice Activity Detector. It must correctly distinguish between voice and noise inputs, a task that is not trivial. If a voice signal is misinterpreted as noise, the transmitter is turned off an effect known as clipping results and this is particularly annoying to the person listening to the speech. However if noise is misinterpreted as a voice signal too often, the efficiency of DTX is dramatically decreased.
It is also necessary for the system to add background or comfort noise when the transmitter is turned off because complete silence can be very disconcerting for the listener. Accordingly this is added as appropriate. The noise is controlled by the SID (silence indication descriptor).
Multiple access and channel structure
GSM uses a combination of both TDMA and FDMA techniques. The FDMA element involves the division by frequency of the (maximum) 25 MHz bandwidth into 124 carrier frequencies spaced 200 kHz apart as already described.
The carriers are then divided in time, using a TDMA scheme. The fundamental unit of time is called a burst period and it lasts for approximately 0.577 mS (15/26 mS). Eight of these burst periods are grouped into what is known as a TDMA frame. This lasts for approximately 4.615 ms (i.e.120/26 ms) and it forms the basic unit for the definition of logical channels. One physical channel is one burst period allocated in each TDMA frame.
There are different types of frame that are transmitted to carry different data, and also the frames are organised into what are termed multiframes and superframes to provide overall synchronisation.
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