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Raytheon tapped by DARPA for high frequency digital communications research by Stephen Carlson Washington DC (UPI) Nov 06, 2018 Raytheon has been awarded an $11.5 million contract for development work on the Millimeter-Wave Digital Arrays program, an effort by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Activity program to enhance military communication security. The contract, announced Monday by the Department of Defense, will see Raytheon focus on digital tile architecture and scalable apertures with transmit and receive components for the MIDAS program. Phased-arrays operating at very high frequency millimeter wave are already being researched as part of the emerging 5G cellular network. As opposed to military communications, civilian systems are designed for relatively short ranges and simplicity of use. Department of Defense networks need to operate in much more complex communications scenarios in ranges that can stretch for hundreds of miles. They also need to be able to operate in 3D environments. "Imagine two aircraft both traveling at high speed and moving relative to one another," DARPA program manager Timothy Hancock said in a statement in January, when DARPA announced the program. "They have to find each other in space to communicate with directional antenna beams, creating a very difficult challenge that can't be solved with the phased-array solutions emerging in the commercial marketplace." MIDAS is being developed as a common digital array tile for multi-beam directional communications. Research will focus reduction of size and power of digital millimeter wave transceivers which would allow phased-array technology for mobile platforms. The program will focus on raising mobile communications to less congested millimeter wave frequencies for secure military communications. Work on the new contract is expected to be completed by November 2020.
Laser technology could be used to attract attention from aliens Washington DC (UPI) Nov 06, 2018 Pointing a special laser from Earth could act as a beacon light to aliens in space, a recent study said. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology study, published in Astrophysical Journal, proposes the idea of focusing a high-powered 1- to 2-megawatt laser through a large 30- to 45-meter telescope in order to produce an infrared beam that could shine into space. That beam, said lead researcher James Clark, would be at least 10 times stronger than the sun, making it powerful enough to sh ... read more
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