Press Release

At Trident Warrior, Engineers Shine Light on New Wireless Technology

Engineers with the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), in Laurel, Maryland, traveled on the USS Carl Vinson this summer to demonstrate light fidelity (Li-Fi), a next-generation secure mobile networking technology for wireless communication between devices using light to transmit data and position.

The exercise was a part of Trident Warrior 2018, a large, annual at-sea field experiment in which the Navy identifies warfighting capability gaps and provides innovative solutions in an operational environment. Several organizations, including APL, worked alongside sailors to experiment with a variety of technologies, including warfare systems, cybersecurity capabilities, and network and communication capabilities.

Li-Fi uses common light-emitting diode bulbs to transmit data. It works by switching LEDs on and off at over a million cycles per second — too quick for the human eye to detect, but not for the photodiode unit on the receiving end that decodes these modulations into a signal that is, in turn, decoded like any other signal.