Software-Defined Radio GNSS Instrumentation for Spoofing Mitigation: A Review and a Case Study

January 11, 2019 ยท The Cartographer ยท ๐Ÿ› IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement

๐Ÿ“š THE CARTOGRAPHER: The Cartographer
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"Title-pattern auto-detect: Software-Defined Radio GNSS Instrumentation for Spoofing Mitigation: A Review and a Case Study"

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Authors Erick Schmidt, Zach A. Ruble, David Akopian, Daniel J. Pack arXiv ID 1901.03434 Category eess.SP: Signal Processing Cross-listed cs.CR, eess.SY Citations 50 Venue IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement Last Checked 1 day ago
Abstract
Recently, several global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) emerged following the transformative technology impact of the first GNSS: US Global Positioning System (GPS). The power level of GNSS signals as measured at the earths surface is below the noise floor and is consequently vulnerable against interference. Spoofers are smart GNSS-like interferers, which mislead the receivers into generating false position and time information. While many spoofing mitigation techniques exist, spoofers are continually evolving, producing a cycle of new spoofing attacks and counter-measures against them. Thus, upgradability of receivers becomes an important advantage for maintaining their immunity against spoofing. Software-defined radio (SDR) implementations of a GPS receiver address such flexibility but are challenged by demanding computational requirements of both GNSS signal processing and spoofing mitigation. Therefore, this paper reviews reported SDRs in the context of instrumentation capabilities for both conventional and spoofing mitigation modes. This separation is necessitated by significantly increased computational loads when in spoofing domain. This is demonstrated by a case study budget analysis.
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