Compressed high intensity radar pulses for better underwater communication.
Background:
Sending information through water is exceedingly difficult. Radio waves are restricted to low frequencies (less than 300 Hz) which require large antennas and lots of transmission power. Optical waves suffer from scattering and need to be precisely aligned. Acoustic systems require low frequencies in order to transmit over kilometer distances with data transmission rates less than ideal.
Technology Overview:
Compressed High Intensity Radar Pulses (CHIRP) help overcome these problems by mimicking the underwater acoustic (UW-A) transmissions of mammals. CHIRP methods have been used frequently in radar and sonar systems. This new application provides an adaptively coded multicarrier chirping technique which resists multipath delays and Doppler spread. The higher frequency and bandwidth produced by chirping techniques significantly increases the data transmission rate (to 300 kbs or better) making this solution ideal for sensor monitoring and long-range communication systems.
http://buffalo.technologypublisher.com/files/sites/7150_in-part.jfif
Source: Jakob Owens, https://unsplash.com/photos/d4ECM3ZYh7Y, Unsplash License.
Advantages:
Applications:
Intellectual Property Summary:
US Patent Number 11,394,594
Stage of Development:
TRL 5 Technology validated in relevant environment
Licensing Status:
Available for license.
<RSS.HDLicensingPotential> Licensing Potential:
<RSS.LicensingPotential>Exclusive/Non-exclusive
Additional Information:
Huang, W. and Pados, D.A. "Adaptive Multiuser MCDM for Underwater Acoustic Communications" arXiv:2003.01988