[Sponsor Content] Northrop Grumman - Future Challenge

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Assured Position, Navigation and Timing:

The Future Challenge

Northrop Grumman has a long and distinguished history of supplying trusted navigation and positioning systems for a wide range of US ships and aircraft (US Navy/Lt j.g. James Griffin)

the use of global navigation Satellite Systems (gnSS), largely through the uS global Positioning System (gPS), pervades almost every area of modern life, and this is particularly true of the military. there are few, if any, aspects of military operations that are not dependent on Pnt: Position (knowing where you are), navigation (how you are going to get to where you want to be) and timing. It is unlikely that any modern military mission could be successfully executed without accurate PNT. This is currently supported largely by GPS, which provides supremely accurate position and timing, with the latter linked to atomic clocks monitored by the GPS ground control segment and traceable to Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) at the US Naval Observatory. PNT provided by GPS is fundamental to precision-guided weapons; the provision of synchronised situational awareness; unmanned platforms; in fact almost every area of military activity. GPS has been so successful that it now pervades much of civil society, and commercial activities such as banking, stock

markets, utilities and transport all rely on its capabilities.

has never been usable underwater or in deep space.

However, there is now increasing concern about overreliance on GPS given the fragility of the signal. GPS is vulnerable to jamming, interference and “spoofing” – the attempted deception of the receiver by the broadcasting of incorrect signals. During the Russian exercise “Zapad 2017” GPS signals were reportedly lost by commercial aircraft and other platforms over the eastern Finnmark region of Norway as far as 250 km from the Russian border, with similar large-scale interference experienced over land and sea across northern Finland and Sweden. And earlier in the same year it was reported that GPS anomalies affected the navigation of some 20 vessels in the Black Sea, which was suspected to have been caused by a spoofing attack.

There is therefore a need for devices to replicate the integrity and reliability of GPS to provide an alternative Assured PNT (APNT) capability which will provide positional data with the same accuracy as GPS, and timing with the equivalent traceability to that derived from the atomic clock. This must not only address the requirements of GPS users who are temporarily denied its use because of physical circumstances or human interference but also extend the benefits of APNT to those who have never had access to the GPS signal.

GPS is also not always universally available simply because of physical factors. Being inside buildings, under dense foliage or underground can defeat the signal, and it

Advertising Supplement

Northrop Grumman Mission Systems has a strong history of over 50 years of delivering trusted navigation and positioning systems, rooted in its Litton Industries heritage of the development of lightweight inertial navigation systems (INS) for aircraft in the late 1950s. By 1983 Litton had produced 20,000 aircraft INS. Litton was acquired by Northrop Grumman (NG) in 2001 and continues to be a major force in the aviation

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