Carrier Interferometry (CI) provides wideband transmission protocols with
frequency-band selectivity to improve interference rejection, reduce
multipath fading, and enable operation across non-continuous frequency
bands. Direct-sequence protocols, such as DS-CDMA, are provided with CI
to greatly improve performance and reduce transceiver complexity. CI
introduces families of orthogonal polyphase codes that can be used for
channel coding, spreading, and/or multiple access. Unlike conventional
DS-CDMA, CI coding is not necessary for energy spreading because a set of
CI carriers has an inherently wide aggregate bandwidth. Instead, CI codes
are used for channelization, energy smoothing in the frequency domain,
and interference suppression. CI-based ultra-wideband protocols are
implemented via frequency-domain processing to reduce synchronization
problems, transceiver complexity, and poor multipath performance of
conventional ultra-wideband systems. CI allows wideband protocols to be
implemented with space-frequency processing and other array-processing
techniques to provide either or both diversity combining and sub-space
processing. CI also enables spatial processing without antenna arrays.
Even the bandwidth efficiency of multicarrier protocols is greatly
enhanced with CI. CI-based wavelets avoid time and frequency resolution
trade-offs associated with conventional wavelet processing. CI-based
Fourier transforms eliminate all multiplications, which greatly
simplifies multi-frequency processing. The quantum-wave principles of CI
improve all types of baseband and radio processing.