Quick study: Ultrawideband

10.04.2006
There's certainly no lack of choices when it comes to wireless communications and networking technologies. With all the currently available forms of wireless access -- cell phones, 3G, Wi-Fi, WiMax, Bluetooth, power lines, and 802.11a, b, g and n -- you wouldn't think there's room for anything more. But technology marches forward, and in the next couple of years, we're going to be seeing a new and different wireless technology.

The new kid on the radio block is ultrawideband, also known as UWB or digital pulse wireless. It will help deliver television programs, movies, games and multimegabyte data files throughout our wireless homes and offices. UWB is faster than current wireless LAN technologies and provides a short-range, high-bandwidth pipe that eliminates interference.

Origins of UWB

Gerald F. Ross first demonstrated the feasibility of UWB waveforms for radar and communications applications in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Originally developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the technology was called baseband, carrier-free, impulse communications or time-domain signaling, until the U.S. Department of Defense named it ultrawideband in 1989.

In some respects, UWB technology goes back to the dawn of radio and Guglielmo Marconi's early spark-gap transmissions. UWB is also a successor to spread-spectrum radio (also called frequency-hopping), a World War II technology that splits a broadcast across many different radio frequencies, using one at a time to avoid jamming. (Curiously enough, spread spectrum was invented -- and patented -- in 1942 by actress Hedy Lamar and composer George Antheil.) In contrast, UWB uses every frequency available to it, all at the same time.

UWB isn't a direct substitute for any other form of wireless communications, but it does some things that no other technology can match. A UWB transmitter sends billions of short-duration pulses across a wide spectrum of radio frequencies. These RF bursts come so fast -- lasting only from a few trillionths of a second to a few nanoseconds -- that each actually uses only a few cycles of an RF carrier wave.