Dept. of Homeland Security on GPS jamming & spoofing
At ION GNSS 2011 in Portland OR, Javad Ashjaee, James L. Farrell and others participated in a panel discussing the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security’s concerns on the effects of GPS jamming and spoofing on our national critical infrastructure.
As Dr. Todd Humphreys noted, U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security recently completed a risk assessment of the effects of GPS jamming and spoofing on national critical infrastructure. Some of us participated as subject matter experts in this assessment.
The DHS report, which is the most thorough one to date on this topic, has left many people saying “Yes, it’s a problem. Now what?”
This panel addressed the question “Now what?”
Topic: How do we secure civil GNSS?
Schedule
- 8:30: Welcome and introduction: Moderator introduces topic, format, and ground rules
- 8:40: Moderator introduces panelists
- 8:45: Moderator frames the central question: “How do we secure civil GNSS?”
- 8:50: Logan Scott
- 9:00: Panel/audience response to Logan’s remarks
- 9:10: Javad Ashjaee
- 9:20: Panel/audience response to Javad’s remarks
- 9:30: Mark Psiaki
- 9:40: Panel/audience response to Mark’s remarks
- 9:50: Questions from audience, discussion among panelists
10:05 — 10:35: Morning break
- 10:35: Moderator welcomes audience and panel back, summarizes morning discussion
- 10:40: Oscar Pozzobon
- 10:50: Panel/audience response to Oscar’s remarks
- 11:00:James Farrell
- 11:10: Panel/audience response to James’s remarks
- 11:20: Felix Kneißl
- 11:30: Panel/audience response to Felix’s remarks
- 11:40: Questions from audience; discussion among panelists
- 12:10: Moderator and panelists offer concluding remarks
- 12:15: Panel concludes
ON GNSS 2011
September 19-23, 2011 (Tutorials: September 19-20)
Oregon Convention Center, Portland, Oregon
Click here for more information
http://www.ion.org/meetings/session.cfm?meetingID=34&t=P&s=5
BOOK on TRACKING
Tracking acceleration dynamics by GNSS, radar, imaging
My 2007 book on GPS and GNSS (GNSS Aided Navigation & Tracking), as its title implies, involves both navigation and tracking. This discussion describes the latter, covered in the longest chapter of the book (Chapter 9). In addition to the flight-validated algorithms for navigation (processing of inertial sensor data, integration with GPS/GNSS, integrity, etc.), this text offers extensive coverage of tracking. Formulations are given for a variety of modes, in 2-D (e.g., for runway incursion prevention or ships) and 3-D (in-air), using GPS/GNSS and/or other sensors (e.g., radar, optical). Position and velocity vectors are formed, in some operations joined by some or all components of acceleration.
This author was fortunate to be “at-the-right-places at-the-right-times” when a need arose to address each of the topics covered. As a result, the words of one reviewer — that the book is
applies to tracking as well as to navigation. The book identifies subtleties that arise in specific applications (aircraft, ships, land vehicles, satellites, long-range or short-range projectiles, reentry vehicles, missiles, … ). In combination with a variety of possible conditions affecting sensor suite and location (air-to-air; air-to-ground; air-to-sea surface; surface-to-air, etc. – with measurements associated with distance or direction or both; shared or not shared among participants who may communicate from different positions), it is not surprising that striking contrasts can arise, influencing the characterization and approaches used. The array of formulations offered, while fully accounting for marked differences among operations, nevertheless exploits an underlying commonality to the maximum possible extent.
Tracking dynamics of aircraft, missiles, ships, satellites, projectiles, …
Formulations described in Chapter 9 were used for tracking of both aircraft and missiles, concurrently, through usage of an agile beam radar. For another example, air-to-surface operations subdivide into air-to-ground and vessel tracking from the air. That latter case constrains tracked objects’ altitudes to mean sea level – a substantial benefit since it obviates the need for elevation measurements, which are subject to large errors from refraction (bearing and range measurements, much less severely degraded, suffice). Air-to-ground tracking, by contrast, further subdivides into stationary and moving targets; the former potentially involves imaging possibilities (by real or synthetic aperture) while the latter — if not being imaged by inverse SAR — separates its signature from clutter via doppler.
Reentry vehicles, quite different from other track operations, present a unique set of “do’s” and “don’ts” owing to high-precision range measurements combined with much larger cross-range errors (because of proportionality to extreme distances involved). Pitfalls from uncertain axial direction of “pancake” shaped one-sigma error ellipsoids must be avoided. A counterexample, having angle observations only (without distance measurements), is also addressed. Orbit determination is unique in still another way, often permitting “patched-conic” modeling for its dynamics. A program based on Lambert’s theorem provides initial trajectories from two position vectors with the time interval separating them.
Those operations and more are addressed with most observations from radar or other (e.g., infrared imaging) sensors rather than satellite measurements. That of course applies to tracked objects carrying no squitters. Friendlies tracking one another, however, open the door for using GNSS data. Those subjects plus numerous supporting functions are discussed at some length in Chapter 9. Despite very different dynamics applicable to various operations, the underlying commonality (Chapter 2) connects the error propagation traits in their estimation algorithms and also — though widely unrecognized — short-term INS error propagation under cruise conditions (Chapters 2 and 5). Support operations such as synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and transfer alignment are described in the chapter Addendum.
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GNSS Aided Navigation & Tracking
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