Samsung SPH-A680SSAQST User Manual
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Section 4A: Safety
174
What are wireless telephone base stations?
Fixed antennas used for wireless telecommunications are referred to as cellular 
base stations, cell stations, PCS (“Personal Communications Service”) stations 
or telephone transmission towers. These base stations consist of antennas and 
electronic equipment. Because the antennas need to be high in the air, they are 
often located on towers, poles, water tanks, or rooftops. Typical heights for 
freestanding base station towers are 50-200 feet. 
Some base stations use antennas that look like poles, 10 to 15 feet in length, 
that are referred to as “omni-directional” antennas. These types of antennas are 
usually found in rural areas. In urban and suburban areas, wireless providers 
now more commonly use panel or sector antennas for their base stations. 
These antennas consist of rectangular panels, about 1 by 4 feet in dimension. 
The antennas are usually arranged in three groups of three antennas each. One 
antenna in each group is used to transmit signals to wireless phones, and the 
other two antennas in each group are used to receive signals from wireless 
phones.
At any base station site, the amount of RF energy produced depends on the 
number of radio channels (transmitters) per antenna and the power of each 
transmitter. Typically, 21 channels per antenna sector are available. For a typical 
cell site using sector antennas, each of the three transmitting antennas could be 
connected to up to 21 transmitters for a total of 63 transmitters. However, it is 
unlikely that all of the transmitters would be transmitting at the same time. 
When omni-directional antennas are used, a cellular base station could 
theoretically use up to 96 transmitters, but this would be very unusual, and, 
once again, it is unlikely that all transmitters would be in operation 
simultaneously. Base stations used for PCS communications generally require 
fewer transmitters than those used for cellular radio transmissions, since PCS 
carriers usually have a higher density of base station antenna sites.
Are wireless telephone base stations safe?
The electromagnetic RF signals transmitted from base station antennas stations 
travel toward the horizon in relatively narrow paths. For example, the radiation 
pattern for an antenna array mounted on a tower can be likened to a thin 
pancake centered around the antenna system. The individual pattern for a 
single array of sector antennas is wedge-shaped, like a piece of pie. As with all 
forms of electromagnetic energy, the power decreases rapidly as one moves 
away from the antenna. Therefore, RF exposure on the ground is much less 
than exposure very close to the antenna and in the path of the transmitted 
radio signal. In fact, ground-level exposure from such antennas is typically 
thousands of times less than the exposure levels recommended as safe by 
expert organizations. So exposure to nearby residents would be well within 
safety margins. 
Cellular and PCS base stations in the United States are required to comply with 
limits for exposure recommended by expert organizations and endorsed by 
government agencies responsible for health and safety. Measurements made 
near cellular and PCS base station antennas mounted on towers have confirmed 
that ground-level exposures are typically thousands of times less than the 
exposure limits adopted by the FCC. In fact, in order to be exposed to levels at