When you make a
call using your mobile the phone sends a digital signal at a frequency in the
region of 1000 MHz, this is in the microwave region of the electromagnetic
spectrum. A local transmitting/receiving station receives this call via a
selected frequency and reroutes via other stations, if needed, to the receiving
phone.
The country is
divided into cells with each cell containing one "relay" station. In
regions where the phone traffic is high more cells are needed in a given area.
In cities one station covers around 2 km whereas in the country this may extend
to over 25 km. You will probably have seen some of these relay stations
springing up all over the place if you travel around the country. The size of
the cell (hence the name cellular phones) also depends on the frequency of that
particular band. Higher frequencies do not travel so far without distortion and
so the cells are smaller.
A mobile phone
is really just a low powered radio which is why you need so many of the relay
stations and cells to cover the country.
I tried to make
a call using my mobile while coming home across the channel from France last
summer. Although there are plenty of stations on either side of the channel in France and England I was out of range of all
of them and so could not make the call.
Photographic phones
Most mobile
phones today can take pictures as well as receive messages. These are a
combination of a mobile phone and a digital camera. A digital picture is
transmitted as well as the audio signal. Photos from mobile phones have been of
great help in reporting both good and bad news events.
Courtesy and mobile phones
Mobile phones
can be really useful but always think about other people when using your
mobile! Talk quietly and always switch it off when you are somewhere where an
incoming call might upset people near you. I have been at a concert where the
music was spoiled by someone’s phone going off. Many people use mobile phones
to send text messages instead of talking – texting is much less of a nuisance
than using your voice.
Possible medical effects of mobile phones
There has been a
lot of public concern about the dangers of microwave radiation to your brain
when using a mobile phone but at present there has not been any firm
conclusions. However I do know people who use text messages rather than holding
the phone up close to their heads when making a call. The wavelengths of
microwaves used to transmit information using a mobile phone is normally just
under 30 cm compared with the 12 cm used in microwave ovens. The shorter
wavelength means a higher energy and so more damaging to human tissue.
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