The middleman of the cellular system that communicates directly with the cellular telephone and relays all of the control parameters from the MTSO to the cellular telephone, as well as all requests for service from the cellular telephone to the cellular system.
The physical structure that contains the control equipment required to connect a mobile station with the switching network. In the GSM network, the cell site is otherwise known as the Base Transeiver Station (BTS).
The facility housing the transmitters/receivers, the antennas and associated equipment.
The physical location of the antenna or wireless telephony transmitter/receiver.
Individual locations of network transmitter, receiver, antenna signaling and related base station equipment. Cell sites may be located on a transmission tower or building rooftop, or consist of an in-building system.
a site where a wireless antenna and network communications equipment are placed for the use of mobile phones
The cellular transmitting and receiving station used to relay calls and information between the MSC and the wireless phone.
A tract or parcel of land that contains a cellular communication antenna, its support structure, accessory building(s), and parking, and may include others uses associated with and ancillary to cellular communications transmission.
The radio tower and transceiver located at the center of each cell.
The location at which communications equipment is located for each cell. A cell site includes antennas, a support structure for those antennas, and communications equipment to connect the site to the rest of the wireless system.
The location where the wireless antenna and network communications equipment is placed.
Another name for a cellular base station.
A cell site acts as a bridge between a wireless phone and the traditional landline phone. Cell site is also referred to as a wireless base station.
The location where a wireless antenna and network communications equipment are placed.
Also called base station, is the central radio transmitter/receiver that maintains communications with a mobile telephone with a given range. A cellular network is made up of many cell sites, all connected back to the mobile telephone switching office (MTSO) via landline or microwave.
The physical location of a cell's radio equipment and supporting systems. This term is also used to refer to the equipment located at the cell site.
A fixed transmitter/receiver location, also known as a base station or a cell tower, which establishes communications between a wireless system and a wireless device using radio links. The cell site includes an antenna tower, transmission radios and radio controllers. See Also: Base Station
The transmission and reception equipment, including the base station antenna, that connects a cellular phone to the network.
Short for Cellular site. A location unit through which radio links are established between the wireless system and a wireless unit. A cell site consists of a transmitter/receiver, antenna tower, transmission radios and radio controllers. A cell site is operated by a Wireless Service Provider (WSP)
The physical location of the transmitter, receiver, antennae, and signalling and control equipment used to provide wireless services.
A transmitter/receiver location, through which radio links are established between the wireless system and the wireless device. The cell site is comprised of an antenna tower, transmission radios and radio controllers.
the transmission and reception equipment that connects a cellular phone or wireless device to the network, usually mounted on top of buildings or on standalone towers.
An arrangement of wires and metal rods used in transmitting and receiving radio waves. In a wireless system, antennae are mounted on radio structures at cell sites. Smaller antennae are mounted on automobiles as part of a mobile phone installation and directly on portable and transportable wireless phones.
A cell site is a site where antennas and electronic communications equipment are placed to create a cell in a cellular network for the use of mobile phones. A cell site is composed of a tower or other elevated structure for mounting antennas, and one or more sets of transmitter/receivers transceivers, digital signal processors, control electronics, a GPS receiver for timing (for CDMA2000 or IS-95 systems), regular and backup electrical power sources, and sheltering.