Understanding Resilient PNT for Defense
Orolia has a long history of providing defense agencies with access to virtually fail-safe Assured PNT solutions. We understand the unique requirements for extremely reliable, secure and highly accurate PNT data in the harsh and mobile conditions of military operations. Orolia’s expertise in diverse PNT technologies has resulted in an innovative layered approach to PNT solutions. Orolia offers a configurable platform that combines small size, weight and power products with interference detection software and a range of robust PNT reference sources to meet specific requirements for land, sea or air. Orolia is the world leader in Resilient PNT, at the core of mission critical applications.
This document serves to answer the frequently asked questions about PNT, how it applies to defense and what current solutions exist to ensure the integrity of and access to PNT data.
What is PNT?
PNT is the acronym for Positioning, Navigation and Timing. The U.S. Department of Transportation provides the following descriptions of PNT:
- Positioning is the ability to accurately and precisely determine one’s location and orientation.
- Navigation is the ability to determine current and desired position and apply corrections to course, orientation, and speed to attain a desired position anywhere around the world, from surface to surface and from surface to space.
- Timing is the ability to acquire and maintain accurate and precise time from a standard (Coordinated Universal Time, or UTC), anywhere in the world and within user-defined timeliness parameters.
Since the development of the Global Navigation Satellite System in the late 70s, Position, Navigation and Timing (PNT) based on satellite input has become the cornerstone of critical applications in maritime, aviation, government and defense as well as commercial industry, allowing receivers to determine location to high precision (within a few meters) using time signals transmitted from space. With time and position data, navigation can be provided.
What is Resilience in PNT?
Resilient positioning, navigation and timing (RPNT) is the convergence of traditional positioning, navigation and timing technology with non-traditional and emerging technology to improve the reliability, performance and safety of mission-critical applications. Resilience offers trusted time and location information by protecting, authenticating and offering alternatives to existing PNT sources such as GNSS.
The operational impact of Resilience is the ability to detect vulnerabilities in GNSS, such as spoofing or jamming incidents, issue alerts and provide alternative sources of navigation and positioning.
Why is Timing Important in PNT?
Determining a precise position from satellite signals depends on accurately measuring the distances between receiver and satellite, and that depends on very accurate measurement of the radio signal’s travel time from the satellite to the receiver, hence the importance of the T in PNT.
What Defense Operations are Reliant on PNT?
Today’s military communications and information dominance systems rely on available and accurate PNT signals to provide leaders with the information required to make timely and effective decisions. Signals provided by GNSS represent the gold standard in terms of availability and accuracy. However, the proliferation of GNSS-degrading and denying devices across state and non-state actors puts this critical information in jeopardy. Traditional PNT devices utilize various alternative internal components to maintain holdover of the PNT data during loss of GNSS input, but are susceptible to drift over time, meaning the information becomes less accurate. Resilient PNT makes PNT applications resilient against GNSS signal interference, jamming and spoofing, and suitable for operation in GNSS-denied environments.
Why Do We Need Resilient PNT?
Resilient PNT solutions can be deployed across defense in command centers and on vehicles, ships, aircraft and personnel, where a discrepancy in data accuracy, availability or stability can impact the safety, security and mission success of military operations.
Threats to GNSS affect numerous military defense systems, all of which rely on trusted GNSS for position, navigation and timing: Communications and command and control systems, signal intelligence applications, mounted navigation units, and/or sensor payloads. For all of these systems a loss of GNSS accessibility and integrity translates directly to degraded operations and can mean the difference between mission success and failure or even life and death.
What Is GNSS?
The Global Navigation Satellite System or GNSS is the primary source of PNT information used to provide location awareness through the geographic location of a user’s receiver anywhere in the world via a constellation of orbiting satellites working in conjunction with a network of ground stations. The USA’s GPSGlobal Positioning System is a navigation satellite system. See also is the most widely known type of GNSS but there are also the Russian Federation’s Global Orbiting Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS), Europe’s Galileo and China’s BeiDou Navigation Satellite System. Orolia is the provider of atomic clocks for satellites in the BeiDou and Galileo constellations.
UK Government research in 2017 identified that a five-day loss of GNSS would cost the UK economy over £12 billion, highlighting the fundamental value of the signal and the growing realization that GNSS as a source of PNT needs to be both protected and irrefutable, hence the birth of Resilient PNT.
What are the most common threats to GNSS?
Many digital military systems are reliant on GNSS to provide the trusted PNT data that allows defense forces to maneuver in, communicate across, understand and make decisions over the modern battlefield. GNSS signals are very weak when they arrive to Earth, and as these signals are ubiquitous in how military systems operate, threats to the availability and integrity of the GNSS signal are growing. Modern state and criminal threat actors have little difficulty gaining access to portable devices that can jam and spoof signals. As GNSS use spreads to more mobile applications farther afield, even natural and urban terrain must be accounted for when considering PNT availability.
Jamming and interference are frequently used synonymously. Jamming generally refers to intentional interference by means of a radio-frequency signal. Interference sometimes is used in the context of natural causes such as atmospheric phenomena. The effect is the same for both: the ability of the GNSS receiver to extract GNSS signal information from the background noise is impaired and rendered impossible. Spoofing is the act of broadcasting false signals with the intent of deceiving a GNSS receiver into accepting the false signals as genuine. From a technical perspective, spoofing GNSS receivers is more challenging than jamming and the consequences are more severe because the receiver actually uses the manipulated signals for PNT calculations. Neither the system nor the operator realize that the indicated PNT data has been corrupted. Spoofing can relocate the receiver, which is not possible with jamming. Spoofing is not an easy undertaking, especially if the spoofing target is moving fast. But it has been done, and the threat is considered real – and growing – by both government agencies and private critical infrastructure operators.
How Does Resilient PNT Protect Against GNSS Discrepancies?
The tactics and technology used to combat jamming and spoofing are referred to as Interference, Detection and Mitigation (IDM). Integrating a strong and well-coordinated IDM solution into a PNT system makes it resilient against jamming and spoofing, assuring the continuity of critical PNT data even in GPS-denied environments.
How Can PNT Signal Interference Be Detected?
The prompt and correct detection of an interference event involves the use of all available information to alert and notify the user(s) of a GNSS-based PNT system about the presence of a threat. GNSS receivers are increasingly equipped with jamming-detection functionality that will inform the user of a jamming/denial situation, offering at least the option of quicker diagnostics in the event of an unexpected signal loss. A relatively new approach to detecting jamming or spoofing attacks is a software solution that can be installed on GNSS-based systems, where it monitors the signal frequency band by applying error detection algorithms. The software can detect if a GNSS receiver is being spoofed or jammed and if the signal becomes too weak or is lost, the time server will emit an alarm and invalidate the PNT information before it can pollute the internal navigation solution or time base.
How Can Signal Interference Be Mitigated?
Mitigation in the context of PNT means that, after isolating the unwanted signal, it is quickly rejected and replaced, causing minimal system degradation. For military applications, the first mitigation measure is often to use Anti-Jam Antennas, either Active CRPA (Controlled Radiation Pattern Antennas), or passive ones. The next mitigation measure may include the use of encrypted technology such as SAASM/M-Code (Selective Availability Anti-Spoofing Module) whenever possible, and/or to use multi-frequency receivers. Another approach is to use GNSS receivers that are capable of independently receiving and processing each constellation, then comparing the live signals to detect suspicious changes. An additional well-established technical approach to deal with temporary loss of GNSS signals is through hold-over solutions, such as oscillators for timing and Inertial Navigation Systems (INSAn INS or Inertial Navigation System - sometimes used synonomously with IMU is a device used to measure a vehicle's speed, position, velocity, heading and orientation by using an accelerometer and a gyroscope.) for navigation systems.
What Else Is Needed for Resilient PNT?
Another vital aspect of Resilient PNT is to test the PNT equipment for its actual vulnerability against jamming and spoofing. This involves the process of continuous improvement through threat replication in the lab to innovate and adopt new detection and mitigation strategies. Threats can be simulated with GNSS simulators in the test lab to understand how a receiver reacts in a spoofing or jamming situation, or to evaluate existing mitigation strategies. The test objective is to harden a PNT system by understanding how its GNSS receiver reacts to jamming or spoofing, implementing a mitigation technique and then testing and modifying the improved system.
Is the Threat to PNT Real?
There is a growing realization of the risks of unsecured PNT. Recent examples of vulnerabilities include an extended GPS outage in the north of Norway during a Russian military exercise in 2017, the widely known Black Sea spoofing of GNSS/AIS reported positions in around 20 ships in 2017, a van driver disrupting a GPS-enabled landing system being tested at the international airport in New Jersey and jamming of fishing vessels attributed to North Korea. Resilient PNT capabilities are critical for continuity of operations to support ground, sea and air military forces operating in conditions with limited or denied GNSS.
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Sheri Ascencio has been part of Orolia's marketing team for almost ten years, where she works to promote the company's leadership in Resilient PNT to aerospace, defense, and government customers. Prior to joining Orolia, she specialized in high growth technology start-ups, serving as Vice President of Marketing for several early-stage firms in the aviation, transportation and gaming industries. She holds an MBA from the Anderson School at UCLA and a BA from Mills College.