Authentication and Handover Challenges and Methods for Drone Swarms
Yucel Aydin, Gunes K. Kurt, Enver Ozdemir, Halim Yanikomeroglu

TL;DR
This paper addresses authentication and handover challenges in drone swarms, proposing scalable, low-latency methods to improve security and efficiency over existing 5G NR solutions.
Contribution
It introduces new authentication and handover methods tailored for drone swarms, reducing communication overhead and enhancing scalability compared to current 5G NR protocols.
Findings
Proposed methods reduce authentication time and communication overhead.
Group-based handover solutions improve scalability in mobile and terrestrial scenarios.
Enhanced security against eavesdropping during handovers.
Abstract
Drones are begin used for various purposes such as border security, surveillance, cargo delivery, visual shows and it is not possible to overcome such intensive tasks with a single drone. In order to expedite performing such tasks, drone swarms are employed. The number of drones in a swarm can be high depending on the assigned duty. The current solution to authenticate a single drone using a 5G new radio (NR) network requires the execution of two steps. The first step covers the authentication between a drone and the 5G core network, and the second step is the authentication between the drone and the drone control station. It is not feasible to authenticate each drone in a swarm with the current solution without causing a significant latency. Authentication keys between a base station (BS) and a user equipment (UE) must be shared with the new BS while performing handover. The drone…
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