What is the Air Interface?
The air interface is how your phone communicates with the cell tower over radio waves.
GSM defines exactly how this works:
- Which frequencies to use
- How to share them among users
- How to send and receive at the same time
Think of it as the language your phone and the tower speak to each other.
FDD: Talking and Listening at Once
When you’re on a call, you need to send and receive simultaneously. You talk while the other person talks.
FDD (Frequency Division Duplex) solves this by using two different frequencies:
The two directions:
| Direction | Name | Who Transmits |
|---|---|---|
| Phone → Tower | Uplink | Your phone |
| Tower → Phone | Downlink | The cell tower |
By using separate frequencies, your phone’s transmitter doesn’t interfere with its own receiver.
GSM Frequency Bands
In GSM 900 (the original band):
| Direction | Frequency Range |
|---|---|
| Uplink | 890 - 915 MHz |
| Downlink | 935 - 960 MHz |
| Gap | 45 MHz |
The 45 MHz gap keeps uplink and downlink cleanly separated.
Carriers: Dividing the Spectrum
GSM divides each band into carriers (individual channels).
- Band = the full chunk of spectrum (e.g., 25 MHz for uplink)
- Carrier = one narrow slice of that band (200 kHz) that carries one channel
Each carrier is 200 kHz wide.
Simple math:
With 25 MHz of spectrum:
Each carrier is like a lane on a highway. More carriers = more lanes = more capacity.
Full Duplex = A Pair of Carriers
A full duplex carrier is actually a pair:
- One 200 kHz carrier for uplink
- One 200 kHz carrier for downlink
| Component | Bandwidth |
|---|---|
| Uplink carrier | 200 kHz |
| Downlink carrier | 200 kHz |
| Full duplex pair | 2 × 200 kHz = 400 kHz |
When someone says “one GSM carrier,” they usually mean the pair.
TDMA: Sharing a Carrier Among Users
One 200 kHz carrier could handle one call. But that’s wasteful.
TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access) lets 8 users share one carrier by taking turns.
How TDMA Works
Time is divided into frames. Each frame has 8 time slots.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Frame duration | 4.615 ms |
| Slots per frame | 8 |
| Slot duration | ~577 μs |
Each user gets one slot per frame. They transmit their burst, then wait for the next frame.
Why this works:
The switching happens so fast (every 4.615 ms) that it feels continuous to humans.
Your voice is digitized, compressed, and sent in short bursts. The gaps are imperceptible.
It’s like a conversation where 8 people take very fast turns. So fast it sounds like everyone’s talking at once.
The Benefit of TDMA
Without TDMA: 1 carrier = 1 call
With TDMA: 1 carrier = 8 calls
This 8x improvement is huge for network capacity.
Time Slot Structure
Each 577 μs slot contains a burst of data:
| Field | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Guard bits | Prevent overlap between slots |
| Training sequence | Helps receiver synchronize |
| Data bits | Your actual voice (encrypted) |
The training sequence is like a “known pattern” that helps the receiver tune in properly.
Putting It All Together
GSM Air Interface Summary
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Duplex method | FDD (separate frequencies) |
| Carrier bandwidth | 200 kHz |
| Full duplex pair | 2 × 200 kHz |
| Access method | TDMA |
| Slots per frame | 8 |
| Frame duration | 4.615 ms |
| Users per carrier | 8 |
Capacity Example
Given: 7 MHz paired spectrum, 7-cell cluster
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Total carriers | 7 MHz / 0.2 MHz | 35 carriers |
| Carriers per cell | 35 / 7 | 5 carriers |
| Users per carrier | (TDMA) | 8 users |
| Calls per cell | 5 × 8 | 40 calls |
Minus a few slots reserved for control channels.
This is how operators calculate network capacity and plan cell deployments.