Abstract

In this paper, we focus on the localization of a passive source from time difference of arrival (TDOA) measurements. TDOA values are computed with respect to pairs of fixed sensors that are required to be accurately time-synchronized. This constitutes a weakness as all synchronization techniques are vulnerable to delay injections. Attackers are able either to spoof the signal or to inject asymmetric delays in the communication channel. By nature, TDOA measurements are highly sensitive to time-synchronization offsets between sensors. Our first contribution is to show that timing attacks can severely affect the localization process. With a delay of a few microseconds injected on one sensor, the resulting estimate might be several kilometers away from the true location of the unknown source. We also show that residual analysis does not enable the detection and identification of timing attacks. Our second contribution is to propose a two-step TDOA-localization technique that is robust against timing attacks. It uses a known source to define a weight for each pair of sensors, reflecting the confidence in their time synchronization. Our solution then uses the weighted least-squares estimator with the newly created weights and the TDOA measurements received from the unknown source. As a result, our method either identifies the network as being too corrupt to localize, or gives a corrected estimate of the unknown position along with a confidence metric. Numerical results illustrate the performance of our technique.

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