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{{Multiple issues|
{{unreliable sources|date=September 2011}}
{{technical|date=September 2011}}
{{refimprove|date=September 2011}}
{{notability|date=September 2011}}
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The eMBMS service can offer many more TV programs in a specific radio frequency spectrum as compared to traditional terrestrial TV broadcasting
MBMS and [[mobile TV]] was a failure in 3G systems, and was offered by very few mobile operators
==Technical details==
LTE's Enhanced [[MBMS|Multimedia Broadcast Multicast Services]] (E-MBMS) provides transport features for sending the same content information to all the users in a cell ([[broadcast]]) or to a given set of users (subscribers) in a cell ([[multicast]]) using a subset of the available radio resources with the remaining available to support transmissions towards a particular user (so-called [[unicast]] services). It must not be confused with IP-level broadcast or multicast, which offer no sharing of resources on the radio access level. In E-MBMS it is possible to either use a single [[Node B|eNode-B]] or multiple eNode-Bs for transmission to multiple [[User equipment|UE]]s. MBSFN is the definition for the latter.<ref name=Lescuyer>{{cite book|last=Lescuyer|first=Pierre|title=Evolved Packet System (EPS): The LTE and SAE Evolution of 3G UMTS|year=2008|publisher=Wiley|isbn=978-0-470-05976-0
MBSFN is a transmission mode which exploits LTE's [[OFDM]] radio interface to send multicast or broadcast data as a multicell transmission over a synchronized [[Single-frequency network|single-frequency network (SFN)]]. The transmissions from the multiple cells are sufficiently tightly synchronized for each to arrive at the UE within the OFDM [[Cyclic prefix|Cyclic Prefix (CP)]] so as to avoid [[Intersymbol interference|Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI)]]. In effect, this makes the MBSFN transmission appear to a UE as a transmission from a single large cell, dramatically increasing the [[Signal-to-interference ratio|Signal-to-Interference Ratio (SIR)]] due to the absence of inter-cell interference.<ref name=Sesia>{{cite book|last=Sesia|first=Stefania|title=LTE - A Pocket Dictionary of Acronyms|year=2009|publisher=Wiley|isbn=978-0-470-69716-0|page=45|url=http://lte.alcatel-lucent.com/locale/en_us/downloads/LTE-A_Pocket_Dictionary_of_Acronyms.pdf}}</ref>
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==Commercial adoption==
Commercial deployment of E-MBMS (and therefore MBSFN) features is expected to start in 2013 as an upgrade of existing LTE networks.<ref name=Parker>{{cite web|last=Parker|first=Tammy|title=Making the case for LTE Broadcast and Dyle mobile TV|url=http://www.fiercebroadbandwireless.com/story/making-case-lte-broadcast-and-dyle-mobile-tv/2012-08-15|
==References==
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==External links==
*3GPP specifications [http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/Specs/html-info/36201.htm TS 36.201] and [http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/Specs/html-info/36300.htm TS 36.300]
*BP Tiwari: [https://web.archive.org/web/20110903144502/http://www.beyond4g.org/is-lte-capable-of-enabling-new-tv-experience Is LTE capable of enabling new TV experience?] (BEYOND 4G: Telecom Research and News Analysis, June 4, 2010)
*Santhanaraj Muthusamy: [https://web.archive.org/web/20110925071022/http://www.teleca.com/Renderers/ShowMedia.ashx?id=e82018dc-3450-48e1-8f61-4db3624262e5 Solution Area: e-MBMS in LTE] (Teleca White Papers, February 2011)
*
*[https://www.free2air.info/post/5g-broadcast-using-3gpp-technology-to-receive-tv-and-radio-services LTE-based 5G Broadcast with larger SFN coverage]
[[Category:Wireless networking]]
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