Saturday, November 10, 2012

Hedy Lamarr - a Hollywood Star Invents Secure Communication

On November 9, 1913, Hollywood movie star Hedy Lamar was born, co-inventor of an early form of the spread spectrum communications and frequency hopping, necessary for wireless communication from the pre-computer age to the present day.

Ok, I assume that you are not necessarely familiar with spread spectrum communications technology. But, maybe you are wondering even more about a Hollywood movie star diva, who should be responsible for the development of this kind of advanced technology...and even more so already in the early 1940s. Well, Hedy Lamarr really was an extraordinary woman. She was born as Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler in Vienna into a well of Jewish family as a beloved only child. Her mother was a renowned pianist and her father a successful bank director. Already at the age of 16 she started a successful career in acting.

The famous director Max Reinhardt casted her in Berlin in the play 'The Weaker Sex' and called her ?the most beautiful woman in the world?. In 1933 Lamarr performed in the Czech art film 'Ecstasy', a film that became notorious for Lamarr?s face in the throes of orgasm filmed in close-up and her full nudity in some scenes. At age 19 Lamarr gave up her career for what seemed at first a fairy-tale existence and married Friedrich Mandl, a man 13 years her senior, one of the richest men in Austria and a munitions manufacturer mogul with close connections to Italian fascist leader Benito Mussolini. Mandl was described to be extremely controlling, preventing Hedy from pursuing her acting career and keeping her a virtual prisoner in his mansions. On the other hand, Mandl threw glittering dinner parties where generals and scientists - as munition manufacturer his so-called brothers-in-arms - entertained the child bride by bragging about their advances in missile technology. A few years later in 1937 Lamarr?s marriage to Mandl became insupportable for her and she fled Europe for the US on the Normandie liner, where On board, she already began negotiations with Hollywood producer Louis B. Mayer of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio, who had signed Swedish actress Greta Garbo several years earlier and right now was on the lookout for exotic European talent. In Hollywood, Hedy Lamarr soon became invariably cast as the archetypical glamorous seductress of exotic origins and played with the era's most popular leading men such as Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, or Charles Boyer.

Three years after her arrival in Hollywood, as German torpedoes downed boats in the North Atlantic during the first phase of World War 2, Lamarr remembered every ballistic boast she?d absorbed around her husband?s table and put her memories and mathematical talent to work. She came up with the idea of a robust radio communication schema, later called spread spectrum and frequency hopping. In general, the idea was not only to use a single small band frequency for communication as e.g. for radio controlled torpedos, but to spread the radio signal over a broad spectrum and to switch between the various frequencies of the spectrum in an almost random order to prevent detection as well as jamming. In her work she was supported by avant garde composer George Antheil, a son of German immigrants and neighbor of Lamarr, who had already experimented with automated control of musical instruments. Lamarr told her idea to Antheil and together they submitted a sketch of a secret communication system in June 1941to the US military resulting in the grant of US Patent 2,292,387 in 1942. This early version of frequency hopping used a piano roll to change between 88 frequencies and was intended to make radio-guided torpedoes harder for enemies to detect or jam. Although a presentation of the technique was soon made to the U.S. Navy, it met with opposition and was not adopted. Although Lamarr wanted to continue working at the National Inventors Council, back in Hollywood like many other movie stars she was persuaded to raise money for war bonds, selling kisses for $50,000 a smack.

The technology was first implemented on naval ships during the Cuban Missile Crisis in the 1960s and subsequently emerged in numerous military applications. But most importantly, the "spread spectrum" technology that Lamarr helped to invent should foster the digital communications boom, forming the technical backbone that makes cellular phones, fax machines, and other wireless technologies such as Blootooth or Wi-Fi possible. In 1997, more than 50 years and five marriages later, Lamarr was recently given the EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) Award for their invention. Antheil, who already died in 1959 was also honored. The award was accepted by Hedy's son accepted for her since she no longer made public appearances, but from her home in Florida she commented "It's about time."

At yovisto you can learn more about spread spectrum communication in the lecture of Prof. Aditya K. Jagannatham from Kanpur.

References and further Reading:

  • Hedy Lamarr in the Internet Movie Data Base
  • The official website of Hedy Lamarr
  • Hedy Lamarr in the wikipedia
  • Hedy Lamarr: Ecstasy and me - My Life as a Woman, Facett Crest (1967)
  • Robert A. Scholtz, "The Origins of Spread-Spectrum Communications," IEEE Transactions on Communications, Vol. 30, No. 5, May 1982, p. 822.
  • Robert Price, "Further Notes and Anecdotes on Spread-Spectrum Origins," IEEE Transactions on Communications, Vol. 31, No. 1, January 1983, p. 85.
  • [in German language]
More about Women in Technology:

Source: http://yovisto.blogspot.com/2012/11/hedy-lamarr-hollywood-star-invents.html

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