This application claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1103578, filed on Nov. 24, 2011, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to a method for selectively, dynamically and adaptively jamming the third-party radio communications that are external to a radio communication network to be protected, which optimizes the effectiveness of the jamming and which uses closed-loop control to limit fratricidal effects on the telecommunication transmitters/receivers to be preserved. The invention relates to an Multiple Input Multiple Output or MIMO-oriented method for dynamically jamming the third-party communications which uses only the radio interface and performs closed-loop control of fratricidal effects on a network to be protected. The communication network to be protected and the jammer or the network and the jammers are treated as a macronetwork of closed-loop multiple-input-multiple-output or MIMO type and are managed jointly by using return channels from the receivers to be protected in order to adapt the jamming instructions and the transmission instructions.
The method according to the invention is used, by way of example, to jam certain chosen communication links between entities that are external to the network to be preserved, which are present in a certain geographical area, while maintaining the available communication links and services, in a quality that is sufficient and controlled in the communication network to be preserved.
The joint use of transmission networks and jammers (or of networks of jammers) by the same force in a theatre of operation in the broad sense, and particularly in terrestrial convoys, in aircraft squadrons and in naval squadrons, is often severely penalized by the absence of precise control over the effects caused by the jammer or jammers on the transmission station or stations of the force's network or networks.
The technical problem to be solved for the jointly used transmission networks and jammers is that of limiting the fratricidal effects of the jammers on the transmission stations, while guaranteeing minimum effectiveness of the jamming on targets or on the areas of interest in the theatre.
Jammer: transmission system capable of transmitting a signal that is intended to prevent the operation of all or some of the equipment using the electromagnetic spectrum (transmission stations, radar or navigation systems that are present in the theatre of operation).
Network of jammers: coordinated set of transmission systems that are capable of transmitting signals intended to prevent the operation of all or some of the equipment using the electromagnetic spectrum and present in the theatre of operation.
“Friendly” transmission station or “friendly station”: transmission station defined as being part of the communication system to be preserved and needing to be protected from the effects of the jamming.
“Friendly” transmission network or “friendly network”: interconnectable set of “friendly” transmission stations.
Friendly transmission: transmission coming from a friendly station or from a friendly jammer.
“Target” equipment: equipment defined as needing to be affected by the jamming.
Communicating jammer: jammer equipped with a “friendly” transmission station.
Network of communicating jammers: network of jammers equipped with “friendly” transmission stations, constituting a subnetwork of friendly transmissions.
Jamming of a piece of target equipment: transmission of a signal or of a plurality of signals, from a jammer or from a network of jammers, so that the target equipment is prevented from getting to work or from continuing to serve.
Jamming of a geographical area: transmission of a signal or of a plurality of signals, from a jammer or from a network of jammers, so that any piece of target equipment that is present in the geographical area is prevented from getting to work or continuing to serve.
Detection of a signal: ability to decide on the presence of a friendly transmission or of a transmission coming from an external entity and to intercept the signal. This detection is performed in the band and the duration of analysis of one or more interceptors which may be accommodated by the friendly transmission stations, for example.
Detection of a transmitter: ability to decide on the presence of a transmitter in the theatre by detecting the signal or signals which it transmits.
Localization of a transmitter: ability to decide on the location of a transmitter in the theatre by detecting the signal or signals that it transmits.
SISO: single input single output: refers to a transmission system having one transmitting channel Tx and one receiving channel Rx.
SIMO: single input multiple output: refers to a transmission system having one Tx channel and N Rx channels.
MISO: multiple input signal output: refers to a transmission system having M Tx channel and one Rx channel.
MIMO: multiple input multiple output: refers to a transmission system having M Tx channels and N Rx channels.
Effectiveness of an area: signifies the level of prevention of the setup and/or maintenance of third-party communications that corresponds to the stations and infrastructures that are present in this area, i.e. prevention of all communications other than protected communications in the area.
Fratricidal effects: level of prevention of the setup and/or maintenance of communications which need to be protected, owing to residual jamming and interference outside the effective jamming area.
The estimation of the propagation channels corresponds to estimation of the impulse response of the propagation channel, or the numbers, amplitudes and phases of the various multiple propagation paths, between jammer(s) and protected receiver(s), which allows adaptation of power and the spatio-temporal modulation/coding scheme in the network of the jammer or in the network of jammers in order to minimize or quash the impact on the demodulator/decoder of the protected receiver(s). At the same time and in parallel, the impulse response measured on the transmitters allows—as in an MIMO network—optimization of the protected transmission links by means of adaptation of the modulation/coding schemes of the protected transmitters and receivers.
The field of jamming has been the subject of numerous works and inventions. However, fratricidal effects are still dealt with fairly poorly in developments known to date. In general, the constraints associated with implementing the methods and systems known to the applicant have the notable effect of drastically limiting the scopes and the number of simultaneous friendly radio communications, or even of preventing the use of friendly radio communications.
The subject matter of the present invention relates, notably, to a method which will allow the effective limitation of fratricidal effects with sufficient flexibility and scope to simultaneously allow jamming of the targets or areas to be jammed and the operation of communications between friendly stations in an operational context.
The method and the system implemented by the present invention are based notably on the use of the following elements:
The invention can be implemented on any friendly stations provided that:
The description below of the methods and systems implementing the present invention is based notably on/
The subject matter of the invention relates to a method for optimizing the jamming of P predefined areas or positions in a network of communication transmitters, jammers and receivers comprising a plurality N_pl of platforms, a number M≦N_pl of said platforms being equipped with antennas and systems for transmitting useful transmission signals, a number N≦N_pl of said platforms being equipped with antennas and systems for receiving useful transmission signals, a number J≦N_pl of said platforms that are managed by a master station being equipped with jamming systems and antennas suitable for preventing the transmissions between entities that are external to said network, said platforms constituting an interplatform network, characterized in that it comprises at least the following steps:
By way of example, the method uses the measurement from the propagation channels coming from the N reception platforms in order to jointly optimize the jamming and quality of the useful transmissions on the transmitting platforms by adapting the transmission power levels, and/or the spatio-temporal coding schemes and/or the transmission protocols in the time/frequency domain of the jammers and the transmitters.
According to one implementation variant, the master station used is one of the transmission network nodes which is associated with a component for calculating the instructions intended for the jammers.
By way of example, it uses programmable jammers that are suitable for dynamically taking into account transmission instructions, on the power and/or on temporal parameters, the waveform, spatio-temporal coding, the amplitude-phase weighting.
By way of example, the method is used in transmission networks using the MIMO, MISO, SIMO or SISO protocol with a return channel from the receivers to the transmitters.
According to another implementation variant, the method is used in a radio network in which the receivers are suitable for measuring channel values on the useful transmitters and on the jammers.
By way of example, the method is used in a radio network in which the reception stations have antenna elements that are coupled to an interceptor taking the channel measurements on the useful transmitters and on the jammers.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent on reading the appended description of the figures, which is provided by way of illustration and is by no means limiting, in which:
The example below is provided by way of illustration and in by no means limiting fashion for a system having N_pl transmission platforms which have MIMO, MISO, SIMO or SISO (a single listening antenna) communication stations.
The transmission network may be made up of a plurality of nodes, and it is possible for the master station used to be one of the nodes or platforms of the transmission network that is associated with a component for calculating the instructions intended for the jammers.
The communication links are shown in the following manner:
I: conventional common link including all of the measurements taken on the communication or “reporting” links (measurements taken by the interceptors on the sequences of signals transmitted by the friendly transmitters Tx, for example in the friendly Rx stations) that are retransmitted by return channel to the friendly Tx stations and/or to the master station of the jammers,
II: link comprising the “reporting” of the measurements on a jammer signal, i.e. all of the measurements taken on the jammer signals (measurements taken by the interceptors on the sequences of signals transmitted by the jammers Br, for example in the friendly Rx stations) that are retransmitted by return channel to the master station of the jammers and/or to the friendly Tx stations,
III: command link used to support the broadcasting and application of the instructions from the master station by the jammers, and
IV: transmission of the jamming signals to the targeted area 3 and/or to the entities Ci that are external to the friendly network.
The method implemented by the invention is based notably on:
In the rest of the description, the channels are determined as being made up of all of the radio propagations between each of the transmitters (jammer or friendly communication transmitter) and each of the friendly communication receivers or each of the targets or areas to be jammed Ci (the areas to be jammed being discretized in the form of lists of points to be jammed).
The channel matrix is the matrix of the combinations of radio propagation channels between the transmitters and the receivers (Tx Rx channel matrix), between the jammers and the receivers (Br Rx channel matrix) or between the jammers and each of the points to be jammed (Br, Ci channel matrix). These matrices are considered in a first global approach between the platforms (and not between the antenna elements), and the value ai,j of an element of the channel matrix thus physically and globally describes the radio channel between the platform i and the platform j. When a friendly receiver comes into play, the matrix is informed on the basis of the measurements taken on the useful and jamming signals. When an area or a point to be jammed comes into play, the matrix is informed on the basis of a propagation model between a jammer Br and a target Ci. All of these matrices are then considered in a second approach between each transmission antenna element (each platform may be equipped with a plurality of transmission antennas, for example a jamming antenna and a transmission antenna, which are themselves made up of networks of elements) and each reception antenna element (each platform may be equipped with a plurality of reception antennas, which are themselves made up of networks of elements). For each of the approaches, the first level of description of this matrix is binary ai,j=1 if the platform, or the antenna, j receives a signal from the platform (or the antenna) i, and a finer level in the second approach, in particular, corresponds to considering ai,j as the impulse response of the channel i,j, which totally characterizes a multiple input multiple output or MIMO, multiple input single output or MISO, single input multiple output or SIMO, or single input single output or SISO linear channel. This impulse response can be estimated according to the measurements taken by the friendly Rx receivers on the signal sequences, or according to the propagation models considered between jammers and the target or area to be jammed.
Knowledge of the positions of the stations is useful for optimizing the operation of the communication network and is necessary for optimizing the jamming. Synchronism or precise dating of the measurements is also useful for better global optimization. Similarly, precise knowledge of the signal sequences contained in the jamming or communication signals is necessary for the measurement of the propagation channels by the friendly Rx receivers and contributes to global optimization.
The graphical representations provide the advantage of offering a synthetic representation of all of the interactions between the players. By way of example, it is possible to show the platforms or the antennas by placing an arc between two platforms or antennas if the signal transmitted by one is received by the other, and therefore if the channel has been able to be measured.
Example Provided for the Implementation of the Method According to the Invention
“Useful” MIMO, MISO, SIMO, SISO communication stations are available on platforms numbering N_PI, of which J platforms have jammers.
“Useful”
Thus, N_pl communication platforms are available. Each of these platforms is MIMO, MISO, SIMO or SISO. M1, M2 . . . , MN
The network made up of the ΣM
The channel matrix of this macronetwork made up of N_pl platforms and ΣM
In the method implemented, called a “closed-loop” method, the transmitters, receivers and communication nodes in the friendly network manage, at each instant t (sampling tk, k=1, 2, . . . ), the communication links and the pertinent parameterizations (protocols, bit rates, coding and modulation schemes, if need be, the weighting of the transmitting/receiving antenna networks, use of relays, etc.), while adapting themselves to the radio environment and to the possible jamming residues, but without being explicitly guided by the control component. It is the jamming itself that is controlled by means of the estimation and minimization of the residual fratricidal effects.
All of the antenna networks of the transmitters Tx1, . . . , Txm (M≦N_pl) and of the receivers Rx1, . . . , RxN (N≦N_pl) are therefore formalized as a macronetwork G0′ (defined by a matrix of size (ΣM
where
N is the exact number of receiving platforms having a reception antenna (N N_pl),
M is the exact number of transmitting platforms having a transmission antenna intended for useful transmissions (M N_pl),
H0′ is the generalized “transmitters to receivers” channel matrix,
Xn(t) n=1, . . . , N is the vector of the useful signals received on the network of the antenna elements of the receiving platform indexed n,
Sm(t) n=1, . . . , M is the vector of the signals transmitted on the network of the antenna elements of the transmitting platform indexed m, in band B.
The link between the element indexed m in the network of transmitting platforms and the element indexed n in the network of receiving platforms is characterized by:
Sm(t) as mentioned above,
Xnm(t), the contribution vector of the signal Sm received on the element n in the receiving antenna network,
Xn(t) as mentioned above,
Lmn the number of paths in the propagation channel,
I the index of the I-th multipath,
α(m,n)I the attenuation of the path I relative to average losses,
γ(m,n)I, the average direction of arrival of the path I,
τ(m,n)I, the average delay in the path L, the delays being contained in a range
[O, T(m,n)] depending on the urban, mountainous, etc. channel,
N(m,n) is the number of subpaths associated with the path I that are supposed to be indiscernible to the band-B signal and are therefore distributed within a range of duration T(m,n)<<1/B,
nI is the index of the subpath I,
φ(m,n)nI,I is the phase of the subpath indexed I and nI,
α(m,n)nI,I is the relative level of the subpath indexed I and nI,
θ(m,n)nI,I) the direction of arrival of the subpath indexed I and nI,
Us(θ(m,n)nI,I) is the directional vector corresponding to the subpath indexed I and
nI for the signal source s.
“Jammers”
Moreover, J platforms among the N_pl are equipped with “jammers” suitable for jamming the communications of the elements that are external to the friendly network, which are denoted by Br1, . . . , BrJ. All of the jammers Br1, . . . , BrJ and receivers and Rx1, . . . , RxN make up a “jamming” network represented by an interference graph denoted by GJ and subject to a generalized propagation channel HJ′=GJ′ & HJ(Br,Rx) defined according to the process described in
All of the useful transmitters Tx1, . . . , TxM, jammers Br1, . . . , BrJ and useful receivers Rx1, . . . , RxN make up a network of “interference/jamming” that is represented by an interference graph denoted by GJ and subject to a generalized propagation channel HJ′=GJ′ & HJ(Br,Rx) defined according to the same process as in
Each of the jammers Brj, indexed j, has an equivalent power level radiated during transmission (PIRE) that is defined by a range [0, PIREMAXj] with which the following are associated for implementation of the invention:
a power level instruction C_PIREj,
a jamming signal Bj,
one or more jamming durations Tbj with recurrences Rbi and a lead or delay τj in transmission of the signal Bj in relation to an instruction coming from the master station,
one or more jamming frequency ranges denoted by Fbj that correspond to the jamming ranges,
amplitude Aj and phase φj weightings,
if need be, an antenna orientation Ψj which will be classed below as spatial weighting caused by the antenna directivity.
The master station indicates to the jammers the power levels PIRE, the jamming signals, the durations of the jamming signals, the recurrences with which these signals appear, the delays, the frequencies and the weightings Ai φi ψi to be applied, using a specific communication link. The friendly communication network allows the master station to be informed in real time (that is to say at each instant t or at each temporal sample tk) and allows the jammers to be managed on the propagation channels Br−Rx (received useful levels, received interference, multipaths, etc.) and on the fratricidal effects caused by the signals Bj j=1 . . . J.
“Jammer Interference”:
According to the above, all of the antenna networks of the jammers Br1, . . . , BrJ and the reception antenna networks of the receiving platforms Rx1, . . . , RxN are formalized by two interference macronetworks that are defined by:
a “fratricidal network jamming” macrograph, denoted by GJ′, that integrates the transmissions by the single jammers and the associated generalized channel matrix HJ′ (
a “fratricidal jamming+network interference” macrograph, denoted by GI′, that integrates the useful transmitters and the jammers, and the associated generalized channel matrix HI′ (
The formal expression J(t) of the interfering/jamming signals received on a receiving network is thus as follows at any instant t:
limiting oneself to the signals coming from the single jammers Br:
where
All of the antenna networks of the jammers Br1, . . . , BrJ and at the target points Ci1, . . . , CiP are formalized in the manner of the above by a jamming macronetwork that is defined by:
Network of the Useful Transmitters+Jammers:
All of the contributions by antenna networks of the useful transmitters Tx1, . . . , TxM to the jamming of the target points Ci1, . . . , CiP, denoted by bi1, . . . , biP below, can also be considered and formalized by a macronetwork of caused jamming that is defined by a macrograph for the “useful transmitters”, denoted by Gbi′, and the generalized channel matrix Hbi′, which are determined by the topology of the transmitters and of the target areas (which determines Gbi') and the models of channel matrices that are proper to each “radio link” from Txm to Cip, which determine Hbi′.
The formal expression of the jamming signals thus becomes the following at each instant t:
“Jammer Signal Optimization Instruction”:
Moreover, each of the jammers applies at each instant t an instruction denoted by Cons—j(t) that corresponds to a set of parameters defined in a field of values that is formerly denoted Dom_Cj.
Dom_Cj is a set defined by the possible parameterizations of the jamming transmissions:
In practice, if bj(t) denotes the jamming waveform transmitted by the jammer Brj, the jamming signal vector is formally defined by bj(t) and Cons—j(t): all of the instructions applied to the jamming waveform bj(t).
The output provides a jamming signal vector Bj(t) of dimension denoted by MBj which takes the following form, similar to the general formulation of a signal transmitted at the antenna output:
In baseband:
On carrier f0:
Where, for example:
All of the parameters other than the application of a delay, the choice of transmission frequencies or subbands and a choice of the waveform apply linearly to the jamming signal and correspond to a convex admissible domain.
“Target Area or Target Receiver”
The J platforms Br1 . . . BrJ are intended to jam one or more targets or areas characterized by a list of positions Ci1 . . . CiP to be jammed. These positions are firstly geographical but may, by extension, be defined “in the broad sense” in the time/frequency/space domains:
The measurement results from the interceptors, for example implemented in the friendly receivers, are used to calculate instructions in a master platform which manages the jammers (centralized control/command):
The results of the measurements are communicated to the control component of the master station.
In order to estimate the JxN jamming channels on the targets Ci, the master station extrapolates the determination of the propagation channel (obtained from friendly Rx) to the Brj→Cp propagation channel (based on behavioural models for channels, for example).
The master station optimizes the reception of the useful communications by means of amplitude and phase instructions sent to the jammers which allow minimization of the fratricidal levels received by the reception antennas (instruction=minimization of fratricidal jamming under the constraint of Tx average power or under another constraint) while maintaining the objective of performance on the targets Ci.
Minimizing the fratricidal effects on the N reception platforms involves, schematically, guaranteeing tolerable fratricidal effects at the same time as jamming.
Guaranteeing tolerable fratricidal effects comes down to minimizing or guaranteeing a level lower than a certain limit for the impact of the signals coming from the jammers, on the signal-to-noise ratio+residual interference+jamming at the output of the demodulators/decoders to be protected, the level limits in question are dependent precisely on the waveform and on the demodulation/coding scheme and on the structure of the network to be protected. By way of example, a common order of magnitude for such a threshold is a binary error rate or BER that is caused by the residual interference and jamming of 10−3 at the demodulation output, which translates into a threshold on the S/J level at reception depending on the modulation (in the order of 7 dB for conventional single-carrier BPSK modulation received with a strong signal-to-noise ratio S/N).
Guaranteeing effective jamming comes down to maximizing the level of jamming or to obtaining a level of jamming that is higher than a given threshold at the points in the area to be jammed: there again, the minimum effectiveness thresholds are dependent on the robustness of the target stations that are intended to be jammed, but except for very specific cases (PN waveform) generating a J/S (jamming over signal) ratio higher than 0 dB in the band of the target receiver is sufficient to guarantee the effectiveness of the jamming.
The station optimizes spatio-temporal coding in the network of jammers under the previous constraints.
Implementation Variants
1/Nature of the instructions and jamming modes:
sectorial
min/max/average power
spatio-temporal pattern
2/In one variant of the method, instructions can likewise be prepared and broadcast to the friendly transmitters.
3/Nature of the spatio-temporal schemes implemented in the friendly transmitting stations:
Jammer Cancellation
SIMO by means of channel formation (CF) or by means of adaptive spatial filtering (ASF)
Optimum filter in the presence of external interference
Rejection filter making use of the known jammer F.O. apriority
etc.
Optimization in the Control Component of the Master Station
Given the topology of the networks and the useful transmission signals S1, . . . , SM, an instruction vector Cons=(Cons1, . . . , ConsJ) is sought at each instant t= . . . , tk-1, tk, . . . in the “admissible” definition domain Dom_C1 x . . . x Dom_Cj inducing the jamming signal vector B=(B1, . . . , BJ)T and verifying a plurality of constraints such as those clarified below.
(i) At least one “BC constraint” linked to the expected effectiveness of the jamming, which can be written in several forms on the basis of the above, revealing one of the following convex functionals:
a BC1-type constraint relating to the maximum level of average jamming or of average “jamming+useful residual” on the target points Cip
and/or
a BC2-type constraint relating to a minimum threshold for the average level on the target points Cip for the jamming or “jamming+useful residual” signal
and/or
a BC3-type constraint relating to a minimum threshold for the jamming signal level or the “jamming+useful residual” signal at each target point Cip:
etc.
(ii) At least one “constraint J linked to the reduction in the interference on the receivers, which can be written in several forms on the basis of the above, such as the following forms, revealing convex functionals:
a J1-type constraint relating to the minimization of the average fratricidal or average fratricidal+interfering signal level of the receivers Rxn:
and/or
a J2-type constraint relating to maximum thresholding for the average fratricidal or fratricidal+interfering signal level on each receiver Rxn:
and/or
a J3-type constraint relating to maximum thresholding for the interfering signal level on each receiver Rxn:
etc.
(iii) If need be a MinJ instruction linked to the minimization of the transmitted jamming power, which can be written in several forms on the basis of the above, such as the following forms, revealing convex functionals:
A MinJ1-type instruction: minimizing the average jamming power over the course of time t and on the jammers j
and/or
a MinJ2-type instruction: minimizing the maximum power averaged over time, transmitted by each jammer j
and/or
a MinJ3-type instruction: minimizing the instantaneous power transmitted by each jammer j
etc.
This particular implementation example for the invention applies to the optimization of tactical barrage jamming in the presence of friendly frequency-hopping communication stations, a method which was the subject of the patent from the applicant under the number EP 1303069.
The text below shows how the general method of the invention described previously can be used for this particular application.
The master station manages a barrage jammer or a network of barrage jammers that are capable of interrupting, upon instruction, their transmissions on a time slot and on a frequency channel indicated by an instruction.
P tactical stations that are present in the theatre need to be jammed, denoted by Cip, p=1, . . . , P. These stations are positions which are known or otherwise. The services that they use and the corresponding points of operation are supposed to be known, as are their features (jamming thresholds/denial of various services, operating margins, etc.).
N friendly frequency-hopping tactical receivers need to be preserved, denoted by Rn n=1, . . . , N.
These receivers are positions that are known approximately. Their waveform and their modes of operation are known features of the master station of the jammers:
In consideration of a time/frequency framework for the useful transmissions which is defined by:
The temporal process can be indexed on the frame by applying the method according to the invention on a frame-by-frame basis. The k-th frame will be denoted by tk. For each frame, it is thus a matter for the master station and the jammer(s):
The propagation times for the signals over several tens of kilometers at the most are negligible in the face of the durations of the useful stages. Similarly, Doppler shifts are negligible in the face of the bands of the useful transmissions. The physical problem is thus reduced to determining the instances at which the transmissions start and the channels that correspond to these transmissions.
The theoretical optimization problem to be solved for this precise implementation example for the invention is thus highly simplified:
The admissible domain is discrete and defined by:
all of the frequency channels F1 to FV,
all of the slots T1 to TS of the frame tk,
two power values transmitted by the jammer(s): 0 (no transmission) or P (transmission).
For each frame tk, each jammer thus indicates the slots (indexed by 1<s1,k, s2,k, sk1,k<5) and the frequencies (indexed by 1<ν1,k, ν2,k, νk2,k<S) to be left empty of a jamming signal (i.e. apply instruction P=0).
Direct Deterministic Solution to the Optimization Problem
If the jammer is ideal and is able to exactly position its “jamming holes” on the useful slots without overflowing onto adjacent frequencies or onto adjacent slots, the optimization problem is solved directly because there is no fratricidal effect on the useful stations if the following instruction is complied with perfectly: for each frame tk, apply to the jammer the no-transmission instruction for each “useful” slot (sksk, νkνk).
Case of a Single Jammer with a Fault+Consideration of the Attenuation of Propagation by Using Return Channels
This implementation example for the invention extends directly to the consideration of the imperfections in the jammers and the attenuation due to the propagation of the jammer in the direction of the useful:
There again, the optimization problem is solved in a highly simplified fashion because there is no fratricidal effect on the useful stations if the following instruction is complied with perfectly: for each frame tk, apply to the jammer the no-transmission instruction for each “useful” slot (sksk, νkνk) for which LnP<Δ.
Case of Several Jammers in a Network with Faults+Consideration of the Attenuation of Propagation by Using Return Channels
The implementation example for the invention extends directly to the consideration of multiple jammers with imperfections and with attenuations due to the differing propagation conditions of the jammers in the direction of the useful.
Fall and rise times of the jamming signal causing a minimum jamming duration tBr greater than the slot duration, which reduces the effectiveness of the barrage jamming all the more
Overflow of the jamming hole spectrum onto adjacent frequencies, which is modelled by an equivalent band BWBr which must be higher than the band of the stage in order to guarantee the absence of fratricidal effect, which reduces the effectiveness of the barrage jamming all the more:
Balance of the link between the jammer Brj and the useful receiver Rn which are modelled by a coefficient of loss Lj,n causing a level at the input Lj,nP. N.B.: this input level can be measured by the useful receivers and indicated by return channel to the master, which accordingly adapts the instructions to the jammer
Operating threshold of the useful receivers for Lj,nP<Δ.
There again, the optimization problem is solved in a highly simplified fashion because there is no fratricidal effect on the useful stations if the following instruction is complied with perfectly:
For each jammer Bj,
for each frame tk,
apply to the jammer the no-transmission instruction for each “useful” slot (sksk, νkνk) for which Lj,nP<Δ
This particular implementation example for the invention applies to the optimization of multiservice GNSS jamming, described in the patent application FR09/05346 entitled “method and system for jamming GNSS signals”. The text below shows how the general method of the invention described previously can be used for this particular application.
It is noted that, since GNSS signals are essentially continuous in nature, there is no time dependency in the application of the method since the environment continues to be static.
The following is considered:
a fixed jamming device made up of J jammers Bj indexed by j=1, . . . , J, of given maximum powers. The jammers are in positions and orientations which are known. Each GNSS service supported by a useful signal s has an associated dedicated jamming waveform (FOB) denoted by Bj,s(t). Each jammer can be parameterized to transmit one or more FOB at different respective average powers Cj,s=<|Bj,s(t)|2>t. If these waveforms are decorrelated, each jammer thus has a transmitted total average power Cj=<|Bj(t)|2>t which is written as j=1, . . . , J; Cj=Σs=1 . . . , s Cj,s.
P GNSS receivers need to be jammed, which are denoted by Cp p=1, . . . , P. These receivers are in known positions. The GNSS services that they use are supposed to be known, as are their features (jamming thresholds/denial of various services, operating margins, etc.).
N GNSS receivers to be preserved, which are denoted by Rn n=1, . . . , N. These receivers are in known positions and have known features. In this sense, the master station of the jammers has a priori information about the interference caused on the receivers to be preserved as if there were a return channel.
A linear interference model for the service s of each receiver n that is well known to a person skilled in the art (and, in order to simplify denotations, subsequently supposed to be homogeneous for each receiver, which does not cause any loss of generality for the invention):
with:
Cs: the power of the useful signal in front of the antenna for the service supported by the signal s (dBm)
GRs: the gain obtained by the processing and by the reception antenna or the reception antenna network on the useful signal (dBi)
ηR: the yield internal to the reception chain (antenna yield, cable losses, etc.)
FR.Nth: the thermal noise of the receiver taking account of the noise factor FR of the reception chain
GEj,n: the antenna gain of the jammer j in the direction of the receiver n (dBi), the corresponding equivalent radiated isotropic power can be written as PIREj=Cs GEj,n
Dj,n: the directivity of the reception antenna n in the direction of the jammer j (dBi)
SSCj,s: the coefficient of spectral correlation between the jammer signal Bj(t) and the useful signal s(t) (with a value between 0 and 1)
Cj,s: the average power of the signal transmitted by the jammer j for the denial of service supported by the signal s signal (dBm) (i.e. level of power allocated by the jammer j to the FOB dedicated to the service s) Cj,s=<|Bj,s(t)|2>t
Cj: the average total power of the signal transmitted by the jammer j (dBm): Cj=<|Bj(t)|2>t:
Lj,n: the propagation loss between the jammer j and the receiver n (dB).
With the previous formalism, the problem is thus modelled in the form of instructions on the jammers Bj needing to comply with the constraints of effectiveness of the jamming on the targets Cp p=1, . . . , P, and the constraints of absence of fratricidal denial on receivers Rn n=1, . . . , N; while minimizing the average total power of jamming:
The impulse responses HB′ and HJ′ are not known precisely but the associated channels can be modelled by an attenuation A that is estimated on the basis of the propagation models.
The use of the multisource interference model and of the antenna diagrams, by contrast, allows more precise clarification of the constraints of effectiveness and of absence of fratricidal denial:
For each receiver p=1, . . . , P to be jammed,
for each service sp=1, . . . , S used by the receiver p:
where Δ′sp is the guaranteed non-operation threshold of the receivers for the service Sp
For each receiver n=P+1, . . . , P+N to be preserved, for each service sn=1, . . . , S used by the receiver n:
where Δsn is the guaranteed operating threshold of the receivers for the service Sn
For each jammer j:
Given S GNSS services, J jammers, N protected receivers and P target receivers, there are N1+M1+J constraints:
P1 jamming constraints (P1<=P×S)
N1 non-jamming constraints (N1<=N×S)
J power constraints.
Using the denotations clarified below, the multiservice optimization problem is written in the following matrix form:
Max Ct.x
Under the constraints:
A.x=b
x≧0
Denotations:
C is defined by:
[−1] vector of components −1 of dimension JxS
[0] null vector of dimension N1+M1+J
x is defined by
vector of dimension J.S+(N1+M1+J) with the following arrangement: I=j,s: j=1, . . . J and for each j: s=1, . . . , S
with
vector of dimension J×S,
with
vector of dimension N1+M1+J
where en is a free variable representing the operating margin on the receiver n
(difference between the operating threshold of the receiver and the global interference level).
of dimension (N1+M1+J)×(J.S+N1+M1+J)
IN1 identity matrix of size N1
IM1 identity matrix of size M1
IJ identity matrix of size J
qn,k=0 otherwise b is defined by
vector of dimension N1+M1+K
with:
vector of dimension N1, p=1 . . . N1
vector of dimension M1, n=N1+1 . . . (N1+M1)
vector of dimension J
The optimization problem posed above that corresponds to the implementation of the invention in this particular example is linear. The solution is thus obtained by implementing the simplex algorithm, which is well known to a person skilled in the art, for solving linear programming problems: given a set of linear inequalities over n real variables, the algorithm allows the optimum solution to be found for an objective function which is also linear.
In geometric terms, all of the linear inequalities define a polytope in n-dimensional space.
The simplex solution makes it possible to determine whether the problem has solutions and, if this is the case (for example for a convex polytope), to determine an extremum, that is to say a minimum-power jamming solution.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
11 03578 | Nov 2011 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4334322 | Clark, III | Jun 1982 | A |
6844841 | Masciulli | Jan 2005 | B1 |
20040009768 | Waters | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20080239980 | Niculescu | Oct 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1303069 | Apr 2003 | EP |
2952491 | May 2011 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130178148 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |