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March 22, 2004
UC San Diego Researchers Win Pentagon
Funding To Develop
Ad-Hoc Wireless Networking Technology For Battlefield Environments
By Michael Abrams
Electrical engineers
at the University of California, San Diego will lead a six-university
effort to enable troops to set up mobile communications networks
on the battlefield, using lightweight wireless equipment during
commando raids and in other hostile and rapidly changing environments.
The project to develop "space-time processing for tactical
mobile ad-hoc networks" will receive approximately $3 million
in funding over three years from the U.S. Department of Defense,
which will have the option to extend funding to $5.25 million
over five years.
The
project for the U.S. Army is one of 31 approved last week by
DoD's Multidisciplinary Research Initiative (MURI) program,
a $146 million, five-year effort targeting topics of "exceptional
opportunity" for DoD technologies and applications. "MURI
topics have very aggressive technical goals for objectives that
cannot be accomplished with existing technologies," said
James Zeidler, principal investigator on the project and a research
scientist and senior lecturer in the Electrical and Computer
Engineering department of UCSD's Jacobs School of Engineering.
"We are developing some fundamentally new concepts and
approaches, and it will be a very exciting project."
Ad-hoc networks form
when communications peers find each other without the benefit
of centralized network control systems. Deployment is vastly
more complicated in fluid tactical situations where special
challenges emerge, and where the price of dropped communications
can mean loss of life and mission failure. Among the difficulties:
peers must stay in touch while having to move around, maintain
stealth, and avoid enemy jamming and eaves-dropping attempts.
The network must sustain itself when communications partners
go out of range or are damaged or destroyed. Noted Zeidler:
"The technology could also be useful to firefighters, police,
and other responders to fires, earthquakes, terrorist attacks
or other emergencies that have knocked out pre-existing communications
infrastructure."
Equipment that would
be used in a tactical ad-hoc network ranges from mobile radios
mounted in backpacks, laptops, and hand-held computers to antennae
mounted on vehicles such as tanks and Humvees that come and
go, and even airborne relays to route data to and from command
and control bases and headquarters.
One target of innovation
for the project is the network protocol suite, a reference to
the many programs used to manage communications. These typically
are grouped into discrete steps or layers, an arrangement that
robs a network of an ability to adapt to changing conditions.
One goal of the project is to set up a cross-layer algorithm
that will enable the different layers to join together in decisions,
for example to decide to rotate an antenna in response to lagging
signal strength, or to rapidly switch partners in response to
movement.
The team will also
explore the use of new antenna technology, coding, and error-correction
systems. One focus will be multiple-input/multiple-output (MIMO)
devices endowed with multiple antennas. This is new technology
that shows great potential for enabling communications in less
than optimum circumstances. In a recent study by Brian Banister,
one of Zeidler's graduate student researchers, a ten-fold boost
in channel capacity was achieved using an eight-fold asymmetric
MIMO channel compared to a one-way channel, given the same signal-to-noise
ratios on each channel. MIMO devices format signals using space-time
coding, where the receiver analyzes positional differences between
pieces of a signal and the timing of the signal's arrival when
decoding messages.
The funding will support
the work of faculty and graduate students on the UCSD campus,
including at the Center for Wireless Communications (CWC) and
the California Institute of Telecommunications and Information
Technology [Cal-(IT)²]. Four Jacobs School electrical and
computer engineering faculty will work with Zeidler on the project:
Rene Cruz, Larry Milstein, John Proakis, and Bhaskar Rao. Research
faculty members at other locations include UC Irvine's Hamid
Jafarkhani; J.J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves at UC Santa Cruz; Yingbo
Hua and Srikanth Krishnamurthy at UC Riverside; as well as A.
Lee Swindlehurst and Michael Jensen at Brigham Young University.
Additional funding from the Canadian Defense Research establishment
will underwrite research by professor Simon Haykin at McMaster
University in Hamilton in Ontario, Canada. Michele Zorzi of
the University of Padua, Italy has collaborated with Professors
Cruz and Krishnamurthy on numerous publications in this technical
area, and will also participate in this project as a visiting
professor at UCSD.
Media Contact: Doug
Ramsey, (858) 822-5825
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