1111.0547 (David G. Messerschmitt)
David G. Messerschmitt
Spread spectrum, widely employed in modern digital wireless terrestrial radio
systems, chooses a signal with a noise-like character and much higher bandwidth
than necessary. This paper advocates spread spectrum modulation for
interstellar communication, motivated by robust immunity to radio-frequency
interference (RFI) of technological origin in the vicinity of the receiver
while preserving full detection sensitivity in the presence of natural sources
of noise. Receiver design for noise immunity alone provides no basis for
choosing a signal with any specific character, therefore failing to reduce
ambiguity. By adding RFI to noise immunity as a design objective, the
conjunction of choice of signal (by the transmitter) together with optimum
detection for noise immunity (in the receiver) leads through simple
probabilistic argument to the conclusion that the signal should possess the
statistical properties of a burst of white noise. Thus spread spectrum also
provides an implicit coordination between transmitter and receiver by reducing
the ambiguity as to the signal character. This strategy requires the receiver
to guess the specific noise-like signal, and it is contended that this is
feasible if an appropriate pseudorandom signal is generated algorithmically.
For example, conceptually simple algorithms like the binary expansion of common
irrational numbers like pi are shown to be suitable. Due to its deliberately
wider bandwidth, spread spectrum is more susceptible to dispersion and
distortion in propagation through the interstellar medium, desirably reducing
ambiguity in parameters like bandwidth and carrier frequency. This suggests a
promising new direction in uncoordinated interstellar communication using
spread spectrum modulation techniques.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1111.0547
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