Abstract

The Global Positioning System (GPS) has become widespread in many civilian applications. GPS signals are vulnerable to interference and even low-power interference can easily spoof GPS receivers. In this paper, two techniques are proposed based on correlators and adaptive filtering to diminish the effect of spoofing on GPS-based positioning. The suggested algorithms are implemented in the tracking loop of the receiver. As a first method, a high-resolution correlator is utilised to avoid big parts of the influence of interference. To improve the results, a multicorrelator technique is also employed. In the second method, an adaptive filter is used for estimating the parameters of authentic plus spoof signals. Interference elimination is performed by subtracting the estimated conflict effects from the measured correlation function. These techniques provide easy-to-implement quality assurance tools for anti-spoofing. As a primary step, in this article, the proposed algorithms have been implemented in a Software Receiver (SR) to prove the concept of idea in multipath-free environments.

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