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Cyber Security and Resilience of LEO Satellite Constellations

Project

Project Details

Program
Computer Science
Field of Study
Space Cyber Security and Resilience
Division
Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering

Project Description

There is a paradigm shift from classical GEO satellites (e.g., EUROSAT) to LEO satellites (e.g., Starlink). GEO satellites are big, expensive, stationary, and orbit at a high altitude (around 36000 KM from Earth) which makes them hard to build and launch to orbit. On the contrary, building a LEO satellite is orders of magnitude cheaper, since it can be assembled (in a lab) from commodity parts, e.g., the CubeSat standard. It is also cheaper to launch being small-sized (e.g., few to a hundred cubic centimeters), which makes it lightweight and thus affordable to rent a space rocket vehicle as a service to put in a LEO orbit, e.g., 500KM close to Earth. However, “there is no free launch”! LEO satellites have limited computer power, limited solar battery charging (due to lack of sunlight during night shifts), and most importantly limited coverage to Earth being too close. To be effective, the workaround is to operate multiple cooperative LEO satellites, i.e., a satellite constellation. Constellations cooperate and coordinate to form a distributed/decentralized mesh delay tolerant network (since satellites may not necessarily encounter each other while orbiting). These small computing nodes that are wirelessly connected in the wild are prone to several anomalies (e.g., solar wind, electromagnetic waves, debris) and cyber-attacks (e.g., wireless jamming, spoofing, eavesdropping, interference, suicide, ...). The cyberattack risk unfortunately gets higher since LEO Satellite properties also facilitate the adversary's mission to launch attacks or malicious satellites. In this project, the intern will have the opportunity to solve related problems on three research directions: Authentication and Encryption schemes for satellite constellations, resilient reconfigurable hardware (FPGA) for satellites, or Distributed/Decentralized/Federated AI-based systems.

About the Researcher

Ali Shoker
Research Associate Professor and Head of Cyber Security and Resilience Technology (CyberSaR), KAUST
Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering (CEMSE) Division

Desired Project Deliverables

The objectives of the project will be to: - explore state-of-the-art research and practice together with PhDs and researchers; - help on defining and solving a problem conceptually; - implement a Proo-of-Concept solution with evaluation/simulation; and - contribute and coauthor a scientific paper. More details can be shared and defined after admission and specific topic selection.

Recommended Student Background

Cybersecurity
Space
Distributed or Embedded Systems
AI