Direct-to-Cell Technology: Enabling Satellite Connectivity for Legacy Devices
by Rohde & Schwarz from IEEE Spectrum on (#761DX)

Direct-to-cell technology uses LEO satellites as spaceborne cell towers. It delivers LTE services to existing smartphones without hardware changes, bridging global coverage gaps.
What Attendees will Learn
- How DTC works as a spaceborne cell tower - LEO satellites carry LTE eNodeB payloads in regenerative mode. How they serve unmodified phones using quasi-earth-fixed multi-beam antennas. How the satellite compensates for Doppler shift and time delay on thenetwork side.
- Why Doppler shift and round-trip time are critical challenges - A LEO satellite's high velocity causes carrier frequency offsets in OFDMA systems. Pre-compensation at a reference point helps, but cell-edge users still face residual Doppler.
- How spectrum sharing and regulation shape DTC deployment - DTC has no dedicated spectrum allocation. It relies on spectrum sharing between terrestrial and satellite operators or re-farmed MSS bands. How national regulations like the FCC SCS framework govern access.
- Where DTC fits in the evolution toward 5G NTN and 6G - DTC is an interim technology offering fast time-to-market satellite services. It bridges the gap until 3GPP NR-NTN matures. How NR-NTN will bring purpose-built NTN features and international spectrum frameworks.