Tag: Safran Navigation and Timing

  • Timing matters: The critical role of GNSS-resilient systems in modern infrastructure

    Timing matters: The critical role of GNSS-resilient systems in modern infrastructure

    When a GNSS signal is lost, plenty of people think about navigation first. An aircraft may find itself deprived of precise position data, vessels may have difficulty determining their location, and vehicles may be forced to use alternative navigation methods.

    However, positioning is only part of the story. There is always something much more fundamental behind each navigation signal: time.

    As a matter of fact, there exists a whole invisible network of synchronization, without which the functioning of telecommunications networks, power distribution grids, transportation, aviation, and many others would become impossible.

    At this very moment, billions of devices around the planet are coordinated through the use of highly accurate timing signals provided by GNSS. This has been one of the most successful inventions of the modern era, though it also remains one of the most overlooked ones.

    However, with a growing number of jamming cases and increasing interconnectivity of critical infrastructures, times are changing. Today, the question is not whether companies need highly accurate timing, but how long they can operate without it.

    The World’s Most Invisible Dependency

    Timing rarely receives the same attention as positioning, yet it underpins many of the systems society depends upon daily.

    A mobile phone call connects because cellular networks remain synchronized. A financial transaction gets verified based on the system’s agreement on the accurate sequence of events. Electrical power can flow effectively from one country to another due to the shared timing reference point among substation and control centers.

    Aviation technology cannot ignore this either. Today, this field requires synchronized surveillance, communications, navigation, and operation systems. There are millions of interconnected processes at the airport, and they require timing for safety reasons.

    Emerging technologies, such as digital towers and more advanced air mobility systems, are becoming more reliant on the synchronization process. In most cases, for instance, GPS is used for its unmatched accuracy and accessibility.

    The challenge now is that dependence often breeds complacency.

    When Time Stops

    Contrary to a total breakdown, timing disruptions tend to be more subtle.

    A network can function while synchronization slowly becomes poor. A communication system can be working without issues while performance slowly declines. Timing disruption goes unnoticed by critical infrastructure operators until they discover that the common reference connecting various systems is no longer effective.

    It is because of this that timing disruption poses such a serious threat. Any small timing issue may rapidly spread across connected systems. Milliseconds can turn into seconds, whereas localized disturbances may quickly become network-wide issues. Depending on which industry sector is being considered, consequences may include reduced performance or even total disruption.

    As GNSS interference increases, this trend will only accelerate.

    Various instances of increased GNSS jamming and spoofing have already been recorded within aviation in Europe, the Middle East, and other parts of the world. Although all focus has been on navigation issues, the bottom line remains the same: if GPS signals are jammed or spoofed, so can timing signals be.

    Resilience Is the New Accuracy

    While accuracy has always been the main priority in the past several decades, nowadays, it starts being accompanied by resilience. Even the best timing solution in the world means nothing when it proves unreliable in case of any disruptions.

    As a result, today’s operators of critical infrastructure are changing their approach to timing, no longer focusing solely on accuracy. The target is to maintain reliable timing under any circumstances, including the presence of adversarial attacks or other forms of interference.

    Such an approach affects the design of the timing architecture itself, which in the future will likely become more complex and rely on multiple timing sources. GNSS systems will remain integral, while other elements, such as atomic clocks or resilient PNT technologies, will complement them.

    In other words, the future is no longer entirely about redundancy but about reliability.

    The Rise of Assured Timing

    Assured PNT is a term that has received considerable attention in recent years, especially among companies working in aviation, military, telecommunication, and energy fields. Its essence is clear and straightforward: companies should not depend completely on one source of time signal.

    On the contrary, robust systems need to continuously verify received data, identify irregularities, and continue functioning without the presence of any reliable time references. In other words, the system is intelligent enough to distinguish between correct and incorrect information.

    The matter is crucial given the current trend toward automation in different industries.

    Automation implies autonomous vehicles, sophisticated air traffic management systems, digital communications infrastructure, and energy distribution networks, all depending on precise timekeeping. Automation, however, doesn’t tolerate uncertainties. 

    In high-speed decision-making processes, synchronization becomes highly important. Otherwise, the notion of autonomy remains just a fiction.

    Building the Next Generation of Resilient Infrastructure

    The silver lining in this is the fact that the industry has responded to this challenge.

    Investments in robust timing solutions are increasing across the aerospace and critical infrastructure industry. Firms working on developing navigation, timing, and inertial system solutions are now developing technology-based solutions that are capable of ensuring accuracy irrespective of whether the GNSS solution is available or not.

    These include solutions around advanced atomic clocks, robust PNT solutions, and signal authentication and monitoring solutions that are capable of detecting any form of interference even before it affects the process.

    Organizations such as Safran have played an active role in this journey by backing the development of technology that enables infrastructure operators to maintain accurate PNT capability.

    The objective is not to replace GNSS. Rather, it is to ensure that critical systems remain operational when GNSS alone is no longer enough.

    The Strategic Importance of Time

    The importance of timing will only increase in the years ahead.

    5G and future communications networks require tighter synchronization. Autonomous transportation systems depend on coordinated decision-making. Smart grids must balance increasingly dynamic energy flows. Aviation continues its journey toward more connected and digitally integrated operations.

    Every one of these developments places greater value on resilient timing. For decades, timing has quietly powered the systems behind modern life. It has been so reliable that many organizations have treated it as a given. That assumption is beginning to change.

    The future of critical infrastructure will not be defined solely by how accurately systems can determine their position. It will be defined by how effectively they maintain trust when their primary sources of information are challenged.

    Because in a world built on synchronization, timing is more than a technical requirement. It is a strategic asset. And when it is lost, the consequences can be felt far beyond the systems that depend on it.

  • Safran unveils GNSS/PNT simulator

    Safran unveils GNSS/PNT simulator

    Photo: Safran Navigation and Timing
    Photo: Safran Navigation and Timing

    Safran Navigation and Timing has unveiled its latest GNSS simulator, the Skydel GSG-8 Gen2, an evolution of its GSG-8 simulator. This new positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) test solution is part of Safran’s family of Skydel-based simulators.

    The GPU-based GSG-8 Gen2 simulator delivers high-end GNSS signal testing capabilities in a user-friendly, turnkey package. It seeks to support the growing demand for location-aware applications and systems requiring navigation or timing.

    It features six front-facing RF outputs and a combined output. It covers the entire GNSS bandwidth and offers a 1,000 Hz simulation iteration rate, high dynamics, real-time synchronization and simulation of all-in-view satellite signals.

    This simulator is ideal for development, NavWar testing and integration projects that require high performance, increased constellation and satellite visibility and multi-vehicle/multi-antenna scenarios. It allows users to generate RF signals that simulate real-world receiver device reactions under user-defined parameters. Users can control various simulation aspects, including receiver trajectories with six degrees of freedom (DoF), multipath signals, advanced jamming and spoofing and atmospheric interferences.

    The simulator can recreate various types of interference, both benign and malicious. Users can adjust power levels, interference signal types, spoofing signals, location, antenna patterns, and transmitter trajectories. In-band and out-of-band jamming signals can be generated without additional hardware.

    The GSG-8 Gen2 can simulate up to 2,000 GNSS signals simultaneously across multiple bands, leveraging GPU power to overcome the limitations of FPGA-based simulators. A single GSG-8 Gen2 can run and control multiple instances, each representing an independent trajectory, vehicle or antenna with its own output connector.

    As a low-Earth orbit (LEO) PNT signal simulator, the GSG-8 Gen2 can generate many signals required for LEO PNT simulations alongside legacy GNSS signals, threats and multipaths. It also supports S-Band signal generation.