Hedy Lamarr Biography (1913-)



Nationality
Austrian-born American
Gender
Female
Occupation
actress/inventor

Though Hedy Lamarr is best known for her work as a Hollywood acting star of the 1930s and 1940s, she also devised a radio technology that was ahead of itstime and will continue to play a role in the development of telecommunications: frequency shifting. Born into a wealthy Viennese banking family in 1913,Lamarr was born Hedwig Kiesler. As a young woman, Lamarr appeared in a Czechmovie Ecstasy, which caught the attention of one Fritz Mandel, an Austrian arms dealer. Mandel married the 19-year-old, and Lamarr received a thorough education in arms and military technology at an endless stream of business dinners. One topic of conversation that intrigued her involved guiding radio signals while protecting them from enemy interference. She left Mandel in 1937, in part because her husband began to become more and more involved withNazi Germany, and escaped to London, then Hollywood, where her film career took off. It was at a Hollywood dinner party in 1940 that she met George Antheil, a film scorer and avant-garde composer, and together they brainstormed theconcept of frequency shifting, also known as frequency hopping.

Lamarr's and Antheil's idea is simple. To elude any interception of radio signals send between a transmitter and receiver, the signals can be divided intoparts and each part is sent out separately across a frequency spectrum. Thetransmitter and receiver are synchronized, and a jammer could only take out aportion, if anything, of the signal, since it would be tuned to only one frequency. Antheil's idea for synchronization was based on his experience with player pianos, and the kind of tape they use to play music. The pair patentedtheir idea in August 1942, and intended it to be used against the Nazis as part of the American effort in World War II. Unfortunately, the military did not use the frequency shifting idea during that war, and they first used the technology in 1962, during the Cuban Missile crisis. By then, the patent had expired, Antheil had died, and Lamarr never received any profit from her idea.Though Lamarr had other invention ideas--including one where a cube could bedropped into water to make a soda drink--none of them came to complete fruition.

However, frequency shifting has continued to grow in importance, especially with the advent of computers and related technologies. Though the principal remains the same, the transmitter uses a specific shared code to send a signalover a spectrum of frequencies to the receiver, instead of random shifting. With the availability of digital signal processing and fast microchips, frequency shifting has been marketed under the name Spread Spectrum and used in wireless telephones and data transmission. The principal is also used by the American government's Milstar defense communication system. Lamarr, now retiredafter appearing in her last film in 1958, was finally recognized for her contribution by an Electric Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award for technological innovation in March 1997.



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