TL;DR
This paper presents a novel GNSS spoofing detection method leveraging unencrypted IRIDIUM satellite signals, using reverse-engineered satellite parameters and real data analysis to verify user positions without additional hardware.
Contribution
The study introduces a new spoofing detection approach based on IRIDIUM signals, providing a practical, hardware-light solution applicable in remote scenarios with extensive real-world data validation.
Findings
Effective detection of GNSS spoofing using IRIDIUM signals
Analysis of hundreds of thousands of IRA messages over days
Solution suitable for unattended, remote environments
Abstract
In this paper, we study the privately-own IRIDIUM satellite constellation, to provide a location service that is independent of the GNSS. In particular, we apply our findings to propose a new GNSS spoofing detection solution, exploiting unencrypted IRIDIUM Ring Alert (IRA) messages that are broadcast by IRIDIUM satellites. We firstly reverse-engineer many parameters of the IRIDIUM satellite constellation, such as the satellites speed, packet interarrival times, maximum satellite coverage, satellite pass duration, and the satellite beam constellation, to name a few. Later, we adopt the aforementioned statistics to create a detailed model of the satellite network. Subsequently, we propose a solution to detect unintended deviations of a target user from his path, due to GNSS spoofing attacks. We show that our solution can be used efficiently and effectively to verify the position estimated…
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