How Does A Mobile
Phone Work?
As you talk on your phone, it converts your voice into an
electrical signal, which is then transmitted as radio waves and converted back
into sound by the phone on the other end. A basic mobile phone is therefore little more
than a combined radio transmitter and a radio receiver, quite similar to a
walkie-talkie or CB radio.
In order to remain portable, they need to have compact
antennas and use a small amount of power. This means that mobile phones can
send a signal over a very short range.
The cellular network enables you talk to your friends,
however far away they are. This is done by dividing up land into hexagonal
areas of land, each equipped with their own phone mast (base station.)
These massive phone masts pick up the weak signal from your
phone and relay it onwards to another phone mast nearer to your friend on the
other line. And if you’re on the move while you talk, your phone switches masts
as you go without interrupting your call.
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