Consumer INS Coupled with Carrier Phase Measurements for GNSS Spoofing Detection
Tore Johansson, Marco Spanghero, Panos Papadimitratos

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel method combining low-end inertial sensors with carrier phase measurements to detect GNSS spoofing, achieving high accuracy without modifying existing receivers.
Contribution
It introduces a new spoofing detection technique leveraging inexpensive inertial sensors and carrier phase data, effective even with low-grade sensors in mobile devices.
Findings
Up to 90% accuracy in spoofing detection
Effective with mass-market INS sensors
Validated through laboratory and field tests
Abstract
Global Navigation Satellite Systems enable precise localization and timing even for highly mobile devices, but legacy implementations provide only limited support for the new generation of security-enhanced signals. Inertial Measurement Units have proved successful in augmenting the accuracy and robustness of the GNSS-provided navigation solution, but effective navigation based on inertial techniques in denied contexts requires high-end sensors. However, commercially available mobile devices usually embed a much lower-grade inertial system. To counteract an attacker transmitting all the adversarial signals from a single antenna, we exploit carrier phase-based observations coupled with a low-end inertial sensor to identify spoofing and meaconing. By short-time integration with an inertial platform, which tracks the displacement of the GNSS antenna, the high-frequency movement at the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGNSS positioning and interference · Indoor and Outdoor Localization Technologies · RFID technology advancements
