Definition of GSM 900 Mobile Jammer:
A GSM Jammer or cell phone jammer is a device that transmit signal on the same frequency at
which the GSM system operates, the jamming success when the mobile phones in
the area where the jammer is located are disabled.
Communication jamming devices were
first developed and used by military. Where tactical commanders use RF
communications to exercise control of their forces, an enemy has interest in
those communications. This interest comes from the fundamental area of denying
the successful transport of the information from the sender to the receiver.
Nowadays the mobile jammer devices or cell
phone jammer software are
becoming civilian products rather than electronic warfare devices, since with
the increasing number of the mobile phone users the need to disable mobile
phones in specific places where the ringing of cell phone would be disruptive
has increased. These places include worship places, university lecture rooms,
libraries, concert halls, meeting rooms, and other places where silence is
appreciated
Introduction
of GSM 900 Mobile Jammer:
Jamming
devices overpower the cell phone by transmitting a signal on the
same frequency as the cell phone and at a high enough power that the two
signals collide and cancel each other out. Cell phones are designed to add
power if they experience low-level interference, so the jammer must recognize
and match the power increase from the phone. Cell phones are full-duplex
devices, which mean they use two separate frequencies, one for talking and one
for listening simultaneously. Some jammers block only one of the frequencies
used by cell phones, which has the effect of blocking both. The phone is
tricked into thinking there is no service because it can receive only one of
the frequencies. Less complex devices block only one group of frequencies,
while sophisticated jammers can block several types of networks at once to head
off dual-mode or tri-mode phones that automatically switch among different
network types to find an open signal. Some of the high-end devices block all
frequencies at once and others can be tuned to specific frequencies.
To jam a cell phone, all you need is
a device that broadcasts on the correct frequencies. Although different
cellular systems process signals differently, all cell-phone networks use radio
signals that can be interrupted. GSM, used in digital cellular and PCS-based
systems, operates in the 900-MHz and 1800-MHz bands in Europe and Asia and in
the 1900-MHz (sometimes referred to as 1.9-GHz) band in the United States.
Jammers can broadcast on any frequency and are effective against AMPS, CDMA,
TDMA, GSM, PCS, DCS, iDEN and Nextel systems. Old-fashioned analog cell phones
and today's digital devices are equally susceptible to jamming. Disrupting a
cell phone is the same as jamming any other type of radio communication. A cell
phone works by communicating with its service network through a cell tower or
base station. Cell towers divide a city into small areas, or cells. As a cell
phone user drives down the street, the signal is handed from tower to tower
A jamming device transmits on the
same radio frequencies as the cell phone, disrupting the communication between
the phone and the cell-phone base station in the town
It's a called a denial-of-service attack . The jammer denies service of the radio spectrum to the
cell-phone users within range of the jamming device. Older jammers sometimes
were
limited to working on phones using
only analog or older digital mobile phone standards. Newer models such as the
double and triple band jammers can block all widely used systems (AMPS, iDEN,
GSM, etc) and are even very effective against newer phones which hop to
different frequencies and systems when interfered with. As the dominant network
technology and frequencies used for mobile phones vary worldwide, some work
only in specific regions such as Europe or North America.
The power of the jammer's effect can
vary widely based on factors such as proximity to towers, indoor and outdoor
settings, presence of buildings and landscape, even temperature and humidity
play a role. There are concerns that crudely designed jammers may disrupt the
functioning of medical devices such as pacemakers. However, like cell phones,
most of the devices in common use operate at low enough power output (<1W)
to avoid causing any problems.
Type
"A" Device: JAMMERS :
In this device we overpower cell
phone's signal with a stronger signal, This type of device comes equipped with
several independent oscillators transmitting 'jamming signals' capable of
blocking frequencies used by paging devices as well as those used by
cellular/PCS systems' control channels for call establishment. When active in a
designated area, such devices will (by means of RF interference) prevent all
pagers and mobile phones located in that area from receiving and transmitting
calls. This type of device transmits only a jamming signal and has very poor
frequency selectivity, which leads to interference with a larger amount of
communication spectrum than it was originally intended to target. Technologist
Jim Mahan said, "There are two types. One is called brute force jamming,
which just blocks everything. The problem is, it's like power-washing the
airwaves and it bleeds over into the public broadcast area. The other puts out
a small amount of interference, and you could potentially confine it within a
single cell block. You could use lots of little pockets of small jamming to
keep a facility under control."
Type
"B" Device: INTELLIGENT CELLULAR DISABLERS:
Unlike jammers, Type "B"
devices do not transmit an interfering signal on the control channels. The
device, when located in a designated 'quiet' area, functions as a 'detector'.
It has a unique identification number for communicating with the cellular base
station. When a Type "B" device detects the presence of a mobile
phone in the quiet room; the 'filtering' (i.e. the prevention of authorization
of call establishment) is done by the software at the base station.
When the base station sends the
signaling transmission to a target user, the device after detecting
simultaneously the presence of that signal and the presence of the target user,
signals the base station that the target user is in a 'quiet' room; therefore,
do not establish the communication. Messages can be routed to the user's voice-
mail box, if the user subscribes to a voice-mail service. This process of
detection and interruption of call establishment is done during the interval
normally reserved for signaling and handshaking. For 'emergency users', the
intelligent detector device makes provisions for designated users who have
emergency status. These users must pre-register their phone numbers with the
service providers.
When an incoming call arrives, the
detector recognizes that number and the call are established for a specified
maximum duration, say two minutes. The emergency users are also allowed to make
out going calls. Similarly, the system is capable of recognizing and allowing
all emergency calls routed to "911".
It should be noted that the Type
"B" detector device being an integral part of the cellular/PCS
systems, would need to be provisioned by the cellular/PCS service providers or
provisioned by a third-party working cooperatively with full support of the
cellular/PCS service providers.
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