Two researchers from the University of Buffalo
have successfully tested an "underwater network
architecture" that might be able to provide underwater
Wi-Fi in the near future. But don't think you'll be able
to use it to post selfies immediately to Instagram while
diving. The researchers, electrical engineering professor
Tommaso Melodina and his graduate student Yifan
Sun, say their underwater Wi-Fi system will be used
to monitor ocean life, detect tsunamis and earthquakes
earlier than current technology and even assist police
in tracking drug traffickers.
The challenge is to find new forms of transmitting
the Wi-Fi signal. On land, Wi-Fi is transmitted
using radio waves but they drop out under water.
Sound waves, on the other hand, travel great in water,
which is why submarines use sonar for navigation.
Melodina and Sun took this principal and applied it
to their Wi-Fi theory, testing out their system in Lake
Erie last fall to some success. They attached 40-pound
sensors to a buoy, then dropped them into the water.
The buoy, bobbing on the surface, converted the Wi-Fi
radio signal into soundwaves. Melodina and Sun then
used a laptop to transmit information to the sensors
and shortly began detecting "a series of high-pitched
chirps" which ricocheted off a nearby concrete wall --
the beginning of a deep-sea Internet system.
"A submerged wireless network will give us an
unprecedented ability to collect and analyze data from
our oceans in real time," said Melodina in a statement.
"Making this information available to anyone with a
smartphone or computer, especially when a tsunami or
other type of disaster occurs, could help save lives."