Car radar, car-to-car and car-to-Infrastructure communication systems serve a wide range of purposes. Among them,
increased safety and comfort, smoother traffic flows with less congestion and reduced fuel consumption. Today, we
use our most advanced technologies to build systems that alert drivers to any potential danger. This enables large
numbers of cars to move as one, avoiding obstacles and maintaining a safe distance from each other. The various
wireless communication technologies we use are all based on RF: electromagnetic radiation at Radio
Frequencies.
Scientists and inventors have traditionally used examples from nature for their own man-made derivatives. In
aviation, in medicine, in all kinds of machinery and equipment, nature has been a tremendous source of inspiration.
When considering the patterns of massive numbers of cars migrating from A to B, we can see similar phenomena in
nature.
A murmuration of starlings
Think of those huge flocks of starlings forming a so-called murmuration. Who has never wondered how they seem to move
as one, how they fly at high speed in the same pattern without colliding once, all seeming to know where they are
heading. They warn each other in a split second in case of an approaching predator, and adjust their direction
accordingly, in perfect synchronization. Huge schools of fish, like sardines, show similar behavior. They even
cluster to mimic the shape of one big fish in an attempt to scare off predators.
A school of fish mimicking one big fish to deter predators.
Biologists are still studying the technologies and senses birds and fish use to show this incredible synchronized
behavior. Sight will play a role, as will sound, but is that all? Is it ultrasound? Or light invisible to the human
eye? Or some other type of radiation we even don’t know yet? And how does the system work: is there one
leader who directs all other “nodes in the system”, does each animal pass on signals to its neighbor and how? And why on earth does not a single bird or fish miss the message and move in the wrong direction? The
animal systems of collision-avoidance and spatial awareness show a level of reliability rarely seen in human-made
wireless communication systems.
NXP is using its leadership in wireless RF communication, in low-power design and in security, to develop superior
chips for Car-to-X communications and for other networked systems with many interconnected nodes, such as the
Internet of Things. At the same time we are studying alternative wireless communication technologies, based on other
physical phenomena like visual light, ultrasound, magneto-inductive signals, body-coupled communications and others.
This helps us explore and innovate in flawless, low-power and secure next generation wireless communication
systems. We will continue to include nature as an endless source of inspiration for innovation, drawing lessons from
the flawless designs of the world around us.