Telecommunications link
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A telecommunications link is generally one of several types of information transmission paths accomplished by communication satellites to connect two points on earth.
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[edit] Uplink
| Look up uplink in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
An uplink (UL or U/L) is the portion of a communications link used for the transmission of signals from an Earth terminal to a satellite or to an airborne platform. An uplink is the inverse of a downlink. An uplink or downlink is distinguished from reverse link or forward link (see below).
- Pertaining to data transmission from a data station to the headend.
- Pertaining to GSM and cellular networks, the radio uplink is the transmission path from the Mobile Station (Cell Phone) to a Base Station (Cell Site). Traffic and signalling flows within the BSS and NSS may also be identified as uplink and downlink.
[edit] Downlink
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A downlink (DL) is the link from a satellite to a ground station.
- Pertaining to cellular networks, the radio downlink is the transmission path from a Base Transceiver Station (Cell Site) to the Mobile Station (Cell Phone). Traffic and signalling flows within the BSS and NSS may also be identified as uplink and downlink.
[edit] Forward link
A forward link is the link from a fixed location (e.g., a base station) to a mobile user. If the link includes a communications relay satellite, the forward link will consist of both an uplink (base station to satellite) and a downlink (satellite to mobile user).
[edit] Reverse link
The reverse link (sometimes called a return link) is the link from a mobile user to a fixed base station.
If the link includes a communications relay satellite, the reverse link will consist of both an uplink (mobile station to satellite) and a downlink (satellite to base station) which together constitute a half hop.
[edit] Sources
This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document "Federal Standard 1037C" (in support of MIL-STD-188).

