Hostile Control of Ships via False GPS Signals: Demonstration and Detection 论文

2017NAVIGATION Journal of the Institute of Navigation引用 253顶会
Maritime Navigation and SafetyFault Detection and Control SystemsTarget Tracking and Data Fusion in Sensor Networks

摘要

An attacker's ability to control a maritime surface vessel by broadcasting counterfeit civil Global Positioning System (GPS) signals is analyzed and demonstrated. The aim of this work is to explore civil maritime transportation's vulnerability to deceptive GPS signals and to develop a detection technique that is compatible with sensors commonly available on modern ships. It is shown that despite access to a variety of high-quality navigation and surveillance sensors, modern maritime navigation depends crucially on satellite navigation and that a deception attack can be disguised as the effects of slowly-changing ocean currents. An innovations-based detection framework that optimally chooses the measurement sampling interval to minimize the probability of a ship exceeding its alert limits without detection is developed and analyzed. A field experiment confirms the vulnerability analysis by demonstrating hostile control of a 65-m yacht in the Mediterranean Sea. Copyright © 2017 Institute of Navigation