Dedicated
Short-Range Communications (DSRC)
In North America, 5.9 GHz Dedicated Short-Range Communications
(DSRC) systems are being developed to support a wide range of
public-safety and private operations in roadside-to-vehicle and
vehicle-to-vehicle environments for the transportation industry.
DSRC has several key benefits: It complements cellular communications,
where time-critical responses (less than 50 ms) or very high data
transfer rates (6-54 Mbps) are required in small zones with license-protected
authority, and it enables a new class of communications applications
that can support future transportation systems and needs.
Since 1995, ARINC has been intimately involved in standards and
technology development for DSRC. In fact, ARINC has more experience
testing potential 5.9 GHz DSRC systems than any other company.
For example, ARINC wrote the first definitive reports on DSRC
spectrum requirements in 1996, which formed the basis for the
5.9 GHz spectrum petition to the FCC. We also chaired the writing
group that documented the first nationwide physical layer 902-928
MHz band DSRC standard released in 1998. ARINC subsequently participated
in standards committees that produced the media-access control
layer standard, application-layer standard, and resource-manager
application standard.
ARINC performed many sets of high-speed vehicle communication
tests to verify the ability of candidate DSRC techniques to meet
the requirements of the developing 5.9 GHz band standards. We
also produced much of the material on the 5.9 GHz DSRC
web site, including the tutorial and application examples.
Currently, ARINC is chairing the 5.9 GHz band DSRC Architecture
Standard writing group and the Physical and Medium Access Control
Standard writing group. We're coordinating the ASTM technical
interface to the FCC on DSRC spectrum and usage rule issues. And,
we continue to participate in ASTM and IEEE standards committees,
as well as ISO TC204 WG 15 and WG 16 committees working on short-, medium-, and long-range, cellular, 5.9 GHz, 60 GHz, and IR
vehicle communication integration issues.
If you have a communication requirement that could benefit from
the characteristics of the new DSRC service and need sound advice,
call ARINC.
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