Soft handover
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Soft handover or soft handoff refers to a feature used by the CDMA standard, where a cell phone is simultaneously connected to two or more cells (or cell sectors) during a call. If the sectors are from the same physical cell site (a sectorised site), it is referred to as softer handoff. This technique is a form of mobile-assisted handover, for IS-95/CDMA2000 CDMA cell phones continuously make power measurements of a list of neighboring cell sites, and determine whether or not to request or end soft handover with the cell sectors on the list.
Due to the properties of the CDMA signaling scheme, it is possible for a CDMA subscriber station to simultaneously receive signals from two or more radio base stations that are transmitting the same bit stream on the same channel. If the signal power from two or more radio base stations is nearly the same, the subscriber station receiver can combine the received signals in such a way that the bit stream is decoded much more reliably than if only one base station were transmitting to the subscriber station. If any one of these signals fades significantly, there will be a relatively high probability of having adequate signal strength from one of the other radio base stations.
On the "reverse" (mobile-phone-to-cell-site) link, all the cell site sectors that are actively supporting a call in soft handover send the bit stream that they receive back to the Base Station Controller (BSC), along with information about the quality of the received bits. The BSC examines the quality of all these bit streams and dynamically chooses the bit stream with the highest quality. Again, if the signal degrades rapidly, the chance is still good that a strong signal will be available at one of the other cell sectors that is supporting the call in soft handover.
Soft handover results in a diversity gain called soft handover gain.