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RAP opportunity at Air Force Research Laboratory     AFRL

Resilient Receivers for Multi-Global Navigation Satellite Systems Applications with Artificial Intelligence

Location

Space Vehicles Directorate, RV/Space and Planetary Sciences

opportunity location
13.40.01.B7197 Kirtland Air Force Base, NM 871175776

Advisers

name email phone
Khanh Dai Pham khanh.pham.1@spaceforce.mil 505.846.4823

Description

GPS is critically important to DoD because it offers ubiquitous positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) services to the warfighter, particularly for military advantage. This capability becomes the foundation for the logistics and support functions behind the front lines and is also subject to a variety of interference and spoofing threats. Future joint all-domain engagements may necessitate operations in GPS-denied environments. As such, future missions may utilize Multi-Global Navigation Satellite Systems (MGNSS) to provide alternative PNT solutions by employing other satellite navigation sources from foreign GNSS, Regional Navigation Satellite Systems, and commercial signals. 

In fact, each external satellite navigation signal carries with it the risk of expanding the surface of vulnerabilities and compromises into protected user equipment. It also introduces the risk of interfering with the quality of existing PNT services already built into the user equipment and thus, reducing their effectiveness. In seeking potential approaches to quantifying, objectively, and empirically assessments of trustworthiness of an actual MGNSS fusion for position, velocity, and time (PVT) solutions, it is important to considering onboard intelligent autonomous agents capable of taking the necessary response and recovery actions, with low-latency response times for confident decision making, robust data fusion techniques, and enhanced MGNSS signal monitoring for MGNSS receivers. The development of trusted use of satellite navigation sources for particular applications and DoD needs will require overcoming the following technical challenges: (i) trust algorithms making confident decisions on appropriate inclusions of satellite navigation sources given the connection of multiple resilience considerations associated with threat absorption, recovery, and adaptation of the user equipment in response to GNSS threats and outages; (ii) fused PVT solutions adaptively selecting meaningful signals based on the strength of association, consistency, and specificity with respect to DoD applications; and (iii) artificially intelligent agents residing onboard user equipment to estimate resilience measures for a given mission and/or application.

Reference

1. Li, Xingxing, et al. "Precise positioning with current multi-constellation global navigation satellite systems: GPS, GLONASS, Galileo and BeiDou." Scientific reports 5.1 (2015): 1-14.

2. Hu, Qing, et al. "A multisource PNT fusion algorithm based on a variance genetic model." International Journal of Control, Automation and Systems 20.4 (2022): 1294-1304.

3. Molina-Markham, Andres, and Joseph J. Rushanan. "Positioning, Navigation, and Timing Trust Inference Engine." Proceedings of the 2020 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation. 2020.

 

key words
Satellite Navigation Sources; Multi-GNSS; Trust Algorithms; Robust Data Fusion; GNSS Signal Monitoring; Assured PNT solutions

Eligibility

Citizenship:  Open to U.S. citizens
Level:  Open to Postdoctoral and Senior applicants

Stipend

Base Stipend Travel Allotment Supplementation
$80,000.00 $5,000.00

$3,000 Supplement for Doctorates in Engineering & Computer Science

Experience Supplement:
Postdoctoral and Senior Associates will receive an appropriately higher stipend based on the number of years of experience past their PhD.

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