Casey Kristin Frye
Feb 27, 2012

Record-speed wireless data bridge demonstrated

A team of researchers in Germany has created a new way to overcome many of the issues associated with bringing high-speed digital communications across challenging terrain and into remote areas, commonly referred to as the “last mile” problem. The researchers developed a record-speed wireless data bridge that transmits digital information much faster than today’s state-of-the-art systems. Multi-gigabit wireless transmission demands multi-GHz bandwidths, which are only available at much larger frequencies than mobile communications normally use; millimeter-wave frequencies -- radio frequencies in the range of 30-300 GHz -- fulfill this need. These unprecedented speeds, up to 20 billion bits of data per second, were achieved by using higher frequencies than those typically used in mobile communications -- the wireless bridge operates at 200 gigahertz (GHz) (two orders of magnitude greater than cell phone frequencies). The team will present their research at the Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exposition/National Fiber Optic Engineers Conference, taking place March 4-8 at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

Related Articles
Alejandro Freixes
Jan 30, 2012
Rockwell Collins awarded exclusive DARPA contract to dramatically advance software defined radio technology
Rockwell Collins has launched work on Phase 2 of a Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) research contract valued at... Read More
Casey Kristin Frye
Feb 13, 2012
Universities develop methodology to analyze internal battery structure
Using MRI machines, researchers at Cambridge University, Stony Brook University and New York University have developed methodology to analyze internal... Read More
James Lee Phillips
Feb 24, 2012
A communications revolution from error-correcting code evolution?
As MIT’s Claude Shannon wrote in 1948, communication methods are bound by bandwidth and noise. Simply put, bandwidth is the... Read More