DARPA and companies pitch in in search for 6G smart road by funding research into high gigahertz and terahertz spectrum.
New York University’s Tandon School of Engineering — home of the NYU Wireless and the Brooklyn 5G event — is joining in DARPA’s 6G research. The school now supports a DARPA-sponsored JUMP program researching high gigahertz and terahertz spectrum for automotive self-driving car infrastructure and intelligent highways.
Tandon joins one of ten universities working in the ComSenTer (Center for Converged TeraHertz Communications and Sensing) group of JUMP. ComSenTer researches developing cellular technology for autonomous road infrastructure.
To make autonomous car travel possible, the road infrastructure will have to handle data demands that can support cm-precision localization, unparalleled high-resolution imaging, and lightweight “whisper radio” technology. Specifically, ComSenTer studying extremely high frequencies in the range of 100 GHz to 1 THz.
JUMP — the Joint University Microelectronics Program — has six research centers each devoted to a high-risk, high-reward research project that funders hope will have a commercial or defense pay off. Each center is hosted by a university.
University of California at Santa Barbara leads ComSenTer. The $27.5 million ComSenTer Center at UCSB is headed up by UCSB professor of electrical and computer engineering professor Mark Rodwell, who leads researchers from 10 universities.
Expected to cost $200 million over the five-year length of the program, the JUMP research efforts are into year two now.
The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is funding 40% of the JUMP research efforts, while a consortium of companies pays 60%. Core companies are Analog Devices, ARM, EMD Performance Materials (a Merck KGaA affiliate), IBM Corporation, Intel Corporation, Lockheed Martin Corporation, Micron Technology, Inc., Northrop Grumman Corporation, Raytheon Company, TSMC, and Samsung.
The non-profit Semiconductor Research Corporation manages the JUMP program, with different universities each taking leads in the program. Academic researchers in the program come from over 30 U.S. universities.
JUMP’s main vertical centers are:
- Computing On Network Infrastructure for Pervasive Perception, Cognition, and Action (CONIX)
- Center for Research on Intelligent Storage and Processing-in-memory (CRISP)
- Center for Brain-inspired Computing Enabling Autonomous Intelligence (C-BRIC)
- Center for Converged TeraHertz Communications and Sensing (ComSecTer)
JUMP’s horizontal sections are:
- Applications Driving Architectures (ADA) Center
- Applications and Systems driven Center for Energy-Efficient Integrated Nanotechnologies (ASCENT)
Learn more about JUMP centers at SRC’s website.
JUMP is part of DARPA’s Electronics Resurgence Initiative (ERI).
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