Interstellar Communication: The Case for Spread Spectrum
David G. Messerschmitt

TL;DR
This paper proposes using spread spectrum modulation for interstellar communication to enhance noise immunity and reduce ambiguity, leveraging pseudorandom signals like Pi's binary expansion, despite increased dispersion challenges.
Contribution
It introduces spread spectrum as a robust method for interstellar signals, combining noise-like properties with pseudorandom algorithms to improve detection and reduce ambiguity.
Findings
Spread spectrum enhances noise immunity in interstellar communication.
Pseudorandom signals like Pi's binary expansion are suitable for encoding.
Increased bandwidth reduces ambiguity but increases dispersion effects.
Abstract
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…
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