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A Civilian GPS Position Authentication System By Zhefeng Li and Demoz Gebre-Egziabher INNOVATION INSIGHTS by Richard Langley MY UNIVERSITY, the University of New Brunswick, is one of the few institutes of higher learning still using Latin at its graduation exercises. The president and vice-chancellor of the university asks the members of the senate and board of governors present “Placetne vobis Senatores, placetne, Gubernatores, ut hi supplicatores admittantur?” (Is it your pleasure, Senators, is it your pleasure, Governors, that these supplicants be admitted?). In the Oxford tradition, a supplicant is a student who has qualified for their degree but who has not yet been admitted to it. Being a UNB senator, I was familiar with this usage of the word supplicant. But I was a little surprised when I first read a draft of the article in this month’s Innovation column with its use of the word supplicant to describe the status of a GPS receiver. If we look up the definition of supplicant in a dictionary, we find that it is “a person who makes a humble or earnest plea to another, especially to a person in power or authority.” Clearly, that describes our graduating students. But what has it got to do with a GPS receiver? Well, it seems that the word supplicant has been taken up by engineers developing protocols for computer communication networks and with a similar meaning. In this case, a supplicant (a computer or rather some part of its operating system) at one end of a secure local area network seeks authentication to join the network by submitting credentials to the authenticator on the other end. If authentication is successful, the computer is allowed to join the network. The concept of supplicant and authenticator is used, for example, in the IEEE 802.1X standard for port-based network access control. Which brings us to GPS. When a GPS receiver reports its position to a monitoring center using a radio signal of some kind, how do we know that the receiver or its associated communications unit is telling the truth? It’s not that difficult to generate false position reports and mislead the monitoring center into believing the receiver is located elsewhere — unless an authentication procedure is used. In this month’s column, we look at the development of a clever system that uses the concept of supplicant and authenticator to assess the truthfulness of position reports. “Innovation” is a regular feature that discusses advances in GPS technology andits applications as well as the fundamentals of GPS positioning. The column is coordinated by Richard Langley of the Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New Brunswick. He welcomes comments and topic ideas. Contact him at lang @ unb.ca. This article deals with the problem of position authentication. The term “position authentication” as discussed in this article is taken to mean the process of checking whether position reports made by a remote user are truthful (Is the user where they say they are?) and accurate (In reality, how close is a remote user to the position they are reporting?). Position authentication will be indispensable to many envisioned civilian applications. For example, in the national airspace of the future, some traffic control services will be based on self-reported positions broadcast via ADS-B by each aircraft. Non-aviation applications where authentication will be required include tamper-free shipment tracking and smart-border systems to enhance cargo inspection procedures at commercial ports of entry. The discussions that follow are the outgrowth of an idea first presented by Sherman Lo and colleagues at Stanford University (see Further Reading). For illustrative purposes, we will focus on the terrestrial application of cargo tracking. Most of the commercial fleet and asset tracking systems available in the market today depend on a GPS receiver installed on the cargo or asset. The GPS receiver provides real-time location (and, optionally, velocity) information. The location and the time when the asset was at a particular location form the tracking message, which is sent back to a monitoring center to verify if the asset is traveling in an expected manner. This method of tracking is depicted graphically in FIGURE 1. FIGURE 1. A typical asset tracking system. The approach shown in Figure 1 has at least two potential scenarios or fault modes, which can lead to erroneous tracking of the asset. The first scenario occurs when an incorrect position solution is calculated as a result of GPS RF signal abnormalities (such as GPS signal spoofing). The second scenario occurs when the correct position solution is calculated but the tracking message is tampered with during the transmission from the asset being tracked to the monitoring center. The first scenario is a falsification of the sensor and the second scenario is a falsification of the transmitted position report. The purpose of this article is to examine the problem of detecting sensor or report falsification at the monitoring center. We discuss an authentication system utilizing the white-noise-like spreading codes of GPS to calculate an authentic position based on a snapshot of raw IF signal from the receiver. Using White Noise as a Watermark The features for GPS position authentication should be very hard to reproduce and unique to different locations and time. In this case, the authentication process is reduced to detecting these features and checking if these features satisfy some time and space constraints. The features are similar to the well-designed watermarks used to detect counterfeit currency. A white-noise process that is superimposed on the GPS signal would be a perfect watermark signal in the sense that it is impossible reproduce and predict. FIGURE 2 is an abstraction that shows how the above idea of a superimposed white-noise process would work in the signal authentication problem. The system has one transmitter, Tx , and two receivers, Rs and Ra. Rs is the supplicant and Ra is the authenticator. The task of the authenticator is to determine whether the supplicant is using a signal from Tx or is being spoofed by a malicious transmitter, Tm. Ra is the trusted source, which gets a copy of the authentic signal, Vx(t) (that is, the signal transmitted by Tx). The snapshot signal, Vs(t), received at Rs is sent to the trusted agent to compare with the signal, Va(t), received at Ra. Every time a verification is performed, the snapshot signal from Rs is compared with a piece of the signal from Ra. If these two pieces of signal match, we can say the snapshot signal from Rs was truly transmitted from Tx. For the white-noise signal, match detection is accomplished via a cross-correlation operation (see Further Reading). The cross-correlation between one white-noise signal and any other signal is always zero. Only when the correlation is between the signal and its copy will the correlation have a non-zero value. So a non-zero correlation means a match. The time when the correlation peak occurs provides additional information about the distance between Ra and Rs. Unfortunately, generation of a white-noise watermark template based on a mathematical model is impossible. But, as we will see, there is an easy-to-use alternative. FIGURE 2. Architecture to detect a snapshot of a white-noise signal. An Intrinsic GPS Watermark The RF carrier broadcast by each GPS satellite is modulated by the coarse/acquisition (C/A) code, which is known and which can be processed by all users, and the encrypted P(Y) code, which can be decoded and used by Department of Defense (DoD) authorized users only. Both civilians and DoD-authorized users see the same signal. To commercial GPS receivers, the P(Y) code appears as uncorrelated noise. Thus, as discussed above, this noise can be used as a watermark, which uniquely encodes locations and times. In a typical civilian GPS receiver’s tracking loop, this watermark signal can be found inside the tracking loop quadrature signal. The position authentication approach discussed here is based on using the P(Y) signal to determine whether a user is utilizing an authentic GPS signal. This method uses a segment of noisy P(Y) signal collected by a trusted user (the authenticator) as a watermark template. Another user’s (the supplicant’s) GPS signal can be compared with the template signal to judge if the user’s position and time reports are authentic. Correlating the supplicant’s signal with the authenticator’s copy of the signal recorded yields a correlation peak, which serves as a watermark. An absent correlation peak means the GPS signal provided by the supplicant is not genuine. A correlation peak that occurs earlier or later than predicted (based on the supplicant’s reported position) indicates a false position report. System Architecture FIGURE 3 is a high-level architecture of our proposed position authentication system. In practice, we need a short snapshot of the raw GPS IF signal from the supplicant. This piece of the signal is the digitalized, down-converted, IF signal before the tracking loops of a generic GPS receiver. Another piece of information needed from the supplicant is the position solution and GPS Time calculated using only the C/A signal. The raw IF signal and the position message are transmitted to the authentication center by any data link (using a cell-phone data network, Wi-Fi, or other means). FIGURE 3. Architecture of position authentication system. The authentication station keeps track of all the common satellites seen by both the authenticator and the supplicant. Every common satellite’s watermark signal is then obtained from the authenticator’s tracking loop. These watermark signals are stored in a signal database. Meanwhile, the pseudorange between the authenticator and every satellite is also calculated and is stored in the same database. When the authentication station receives the data from the supplicant, it converts the raw IF signal into the quadrature (Q) channel signals. Then the supplicant’s Q channel signal is used to perform the cross-correlation with the watermark signal in the database. If the correlation peak is found at the expected time, the supplicant’s signal passes the signal-authentication test. By measuring the relative peak time of every common satellite, a position can be computed. The position authentication involves comparing the reported position of the supplicant to this calculated position. If the difference between two positions is within a pre-determined range, the reported position passes the position authentication. While in principle it is straightforward to do authentication as described above, in practice there are some challenges that need to be addressed. For example, when there is only one common satellite, the only common signal in the Q channel signals is this common satellite’s P(Y) signal. So the cross-correlation only has one peak. If there are two or more common satellites, the common signals in the Q channel signals include not only the P(Y) signals but also C/A signals. Then the cross-correlation result will have multiple peaks. We call this problem the C/A leakage problem, which will be addressed below. C/A Residual Filter The C/A signal energy in the GPS signal is about double the P(Y) signal energy. So the C/A false peaks are higher than the true peak. The C/A false peaks repeat every 1 millisecond. If the C/A false peaks occur, they are greater than the true peak in both number and strength. Because of background noise, it is hard to identify the true peak from the correlation result corrupted by the C/A residuals. To deal with this problem, a high-pass filter can be used. Alternatively, because the C/A code is known, a match filter can be designed to filter out any given GPS satellite’s C/A signal from the Q channel signal used for detection. However, this implies that one match filter is needed for every common satellite simultaneously in view of the authenticator and supplicant. This can be cumbersome and, thus, the filtering approach is pursued here. In the frequency domain, the energy of the base-band C/A signal is mainly (56 percent) within a ±1.023 MHz band, while the energy of the base-band P(Y) signal is spread over a wider band of ±10.23 MHz. A high-pass filter can be applied to Q channel signals to filter out the signal energy in the ±1.023 MHz band. In this way, all satellites’ C/A signal energy can be attenuated by one filter rather than using separate match filters for different satellites. FIGURE 4 is the frequency response of a high-pass filter designed to filter out the C/A signal energy. The spectrum of the C/A signal is also plotted in the figure. The high-pass filter only removes the main lobe of the C/A signals. Unfortunately, the high-pass filter also attenuates part of the P(Y) signal energy. This degrades the auto-correlation peak of the P(Y) signal. Even though the gain of the high-pass filter is the same for both the C/A and the P(Y) signals, this effect on their auto-correlation is different. That is because the percentage of the low-frequency energy of the C/A signal is much higher than that of the P(Y) signal. This, however, is not a significant drawback as it may appear initially. To see why this is so, note that the objective of the high-pass filter is to obtain the greatest false-peak rejection ratio defined to be the ratio between the peak value of P(Y) auto-correlation and that of the C/A auto-correlation. The false-peak rejection ratio of the non-filtered signals is 0.5. Therefore, all one has to do is adjust the cut-off frequency of the high-pass filter to achieve a desired false-peak rejection ratio. FIGURE 4. Frequency response of the notch filter. The simulation results in FIGURE 5 show that one simple high-pass filter rather than multiple match filters can be designed to achieve an acceptable false-peak rejection ratio. The auto-correlation peak value of the filtered C/A signal and that of the filtered P(Y) signal is plotted in the figure. While the P(Y) signal is attenuated by about 25 percent, the C/A code signal is attenuated by 91.5 percent (the non-filtered C/A auto-correlation peak is 2). The false-peak rejection ratio is boosted from 0.5 to 4.36 by using the appropriate high-pass filter. FIGURE 5. Auto-correlation of the filtered C/A and P(Y) signals. Position Calculation Consider the situation depicted in FIGURE 6 where the authenticator and the supplicant have multiple common satellites in view. In this case, not only can we perform the signal authentication but also obtain an estimate of the pseudorange information from the authentication. Thus, the authenticated pseudorange information can be further used to calculate the supplicant’s position if we have at least three estimates of pseudoranges between the supplicant and GPS satellites. Since this position solution of the supplicant is based on the P(Y) watermark signal rather than the supplicant’s C/A signal, it is an independent and authentic solution of the supplicant’s position. By comparing this authentic position with the reported position of the supplicant, we can authenticate the veracity of the supplicant’s reported GPS position. FIGURE 6. Positioning using a watermark signal. The situation shown in Figure 6 is very similar to double-difference differential GPS. The major difference between what is shown in the figure and the traditional double difference is how the differential ranges are calculated. Figure 6 shows how the range information can be obtained during the signal authentication process. Let us assume that the authenticator and the supplicant have four common GPS satellites in view: SAT1, SAT2, SAT3, and SAT4. The signals transmitted from the satellites at time t are S1(t), S2(t), S3(t), and S4(t), respectively. Suppose a signal broadcast by SAT1 at time t0 arrives at the supplicant at t0 + ν1s where ν1s is the travel time of the signal. At the same time, signals from SAT2, SAT3, and SAT4 are received by the supplicant. Let us denote the travel time of these signals as ν2s, ν3s, and ν4s, respectively. These same signals will be also received at the authenticator. We will denote the travel times for the signals from satellite to authenticator as ν1a, ν2a, ν3a, and ν4a. The signal at a receiver’s antenna is the superposition of the signals from all the satellites. This is shown in FIGURE 7 where a snapshot of the signal received at the supplicant’s antenna at time t0 + ν1s includes GPS signals from SAT1, SAT2, SAT3, and SAT4. Note that even though the arrival times of these signals are the same, their transmit times (that is, the times they were broadcast from the satellites) are different because the ranges are different. The signals received at the supplicant will be S1(t0), S2(t0 + ν1s – ν2s), S3(t0 + ν1s – ν3s), and S4(t0 + ν1s – ν4s). This same snapshot of the signals at the supplicant is used to detect the matched watermark signals from SAT1, SAT2, SAT3, and SAT4 at the authenticator. Thus the correlation peaks between the supplicant’s and the authenticator’s signal should occur at t0 + ν1a, t0 + ν1s – ν2s + ν2a, t0 + ν1s – ν3s + ν3a, and t0 + ν1s – ν4s + ν4a. Referring to Figure 6 again, suppose the authenticator’s position (xa, ya, za) is known but the supplicant’s position (xs, ys, zs) is unknown and needs to be determined. Because the actual ith common satellite (xi , yi , zi ) is also known to the authenticator, each of the ρia, the pseudorange between the ith satellite and the authenticator, is known. If ρis is the pseudorange to the ith satellite measured at the supplicant, the pseudoranges and the time difference satisfies equation (1): ρ2s – ρ1s= ρ2a – ρ1a – ct21 + cχ21      (1) where χ21 is the differential range error primarily due to tropospheric and ionospheric delays. In addition, c is the speed of light, and t21 is the measured time difference as shown in Figure 7. Finally, ρis for i = 1, 2, 3, 4 is given by:   (2) FIGURE 7. Relative time delays constrained by positions. If more than four common satellites are in view between the supplicant and authenticator, equation (1) can be used to form a system of equations in three unknowns. The unknowns are the components of the supplicant’s position vector rs = [xs, ys, zs]T. This equation can be linearized and then solved using least-squares techniques. When linearized, the equations have the following form: Aδrs= δm       (3) where δrs = [δxs,δys,δzs]T, which is the estimation error of the supplicant’s position. The matrix A is given by where  is the line of sight vector from the supplicant to the ith satellite. Finally, the vector δm is given by: (4) where δri is the ith satellite’s position error, δρia is the measurement error of pseudorange ρia or pseudorange noise. In addition, δtij is the time difference error. Finally, δχij is the error of χij defined earlier. Equation (3) is in a standard form that can be solved by a weighted least-squares method. The solution is δrs = ( AT R-1 A)-1 AT R-1δm     (5) where R is the covariance matrix of the measurement error vector δm. From equations (3) and (5), we can see that the supplicant’s position accuracy depends on both the geometry and the measurement errors. Hardware and Software In what follows, we describe an authenticator which is designed to capture the GPS raw signals and to test the performance of the authentication method described above. Since we are relying on the P(Y) signal for authentication, the GPS receivers used must have an RF front end with at least a 20-MHz bandwidth. Furthermore, they must be coupled with a GPS antenna with a similar bandwidth. The RF front end must also have low noise. This is because the authentication method uses a noisy piece of the P(Y) signal at the authenticator as a template to detect if that P(Y) piece exists in the supplicant’s raw IF signal. Thus, the detection is very sensitive to the noise in both the authenticator and the supplicant signals. Finally, the sampling of the down-converted and digitized RF signal must be done at a high rate because the positioning accuracy depends on the accuracy of the pseudorange reconstructed by the authenticator. The pseudorange is calculated from the time-difference measurement. The accuracy of this time difference depends on the sampling frequency to digitize the IF signal. The high sampling frequency means high data bandwidth after the sampling. The authenticator designed for this work and shown in FIGURE 8 satisfies the above requirements. A block diagram of the authenticator is shown in Figure 8a and the constructed unit in Figure 8b. The IF signal processing unit in the authenticator is based on the USRP N210 software-defined radio. It offers the function of down converting, digitalization, and data transmission. The firmware and field-programmable-gate-array configuration in the USRP N210 are modified to integrate a software automatic gain control and to increase the data transmission efficiency. The sampling frequency is 100 MHz and the effective resolution of the analog-to-digital conversion is 6 bits. The authenticator is battery powered and can operate for up to four hours at full load. FIGURE 8a. Block diagram of GPS position authenticator. Performance Validation Next, we present results demonstrating the performance of the authenticator described above. First, we present results that show we can successfully deal with the C/A leakage problem using the simple high-pass filter. We do this by performing a correlation between snapshots of signal collected from the authenticator and a second USRP N210 software-defined radio. FIGURE 9a is the correlation result without the high-pass filter. The periodic peaks in the result have a period of 1 millisecond and are a graphic representation of the C/A leakage problem. Because of noise, these peaks do not have the same amplitude. FIGURE 9b shows the correlation result using the same data snapshot as in Figure 9a. The difference is that Figure 9b uses the high-pass filter to attenuate the false peaks caused by the C/A signal residual. Only one peak appears in this result as expected and, thus, confirms the analysis given earlier. FIGURE 9a. Example of cross-correlation detection results without high-pass filter. FIGURE 9b. Example of cross-correlation with high-pass filter. We performed an experiment to validate the authentication performance. In this experiment, the authenticator and the supplicant were separated by about 1 mile (about 1.6 kilometers). The location of the authenticator was fixed. The supplicant was then sequentially placed at five points along a straight line. The distance between two adjacent points is about 15 meters. The supplicant was in an open area with no tall buildings or structures. Therefore, a sufficient number of satellites were in view and multipath, if any, was minimal. The locations of the five test points are shown in FIGURE 10. FIGURE 10. Five-point field test. Image courtesy of Google. The first step of this test was to place the supplicant at point A and collect a 40-millisecond snippet of data. This data was then processed by the authenticator to determine if: The signal contained the watermark. We call this the “signal authentication test.” It determines whether a genuine GPS signal is being used to form the supplicant’s position report. The supplicant is actually at the position coordinates that they say they are. We call this the “position authentication test.” It determines whether or not falsification of the position report is being attempted. Next, the supplicant was moved to point B. However, in this instance, the supplicant reports that it is still located at point A. That is, it makes a false position report. This is repeated for the remaining positions (C through E) where at each point the supplicant reports that it is located at point A. That is, the supplicant continues to make false position reports. In this experiment, we have five common satellites between the supplicant (at all of the test points A to E) and the authenticator. The results of the experiment are summarized in TABLE 1. If we can detect a strong peak for every common satellite, we say this point passes the signal authentication test (and note “Yes” in second column of Table 1). That means the supplicant’s raw IF signal has the watermark signal from every common satellite. Next, we perform the position authentication test. This test tries to determine whether the supplicant is at the position it claims to be. If we determine that the position of the supplicant is inconsistent with its reported position, we say that the supplicant has failed the position authentication test. In this case we put a “No” in the third column of Table 1. As we can see from Table 1, the performance of the authenticator is consistent with the test setup. That is, even though the wrong positions of points (B, C, D, E) are reported, the authenticator can detect the inconsistency between the reported position and the raw IF data. Furthermore, since the distance between two adjacent points is 15 meters, this implies that resolution of the position authentication is at or better than 15 meters. While we have not tested it, based on the timing resolution used in the system, we believe resolutions better than 12 meters are achievable. Table 1. Five-point position authentication results. Conclusion In this article, we have described a GPS position authentication system. The authentication system has many potential applications where high credibility of a position report is required, such as cargo and asset tracking. The system detects a specific watermark signal in the broadcast GPS signal to judge if a receiver is using the authentic GPS signal. The differences between the watermark signal travel times are constrained by the positions of the GPS satellites and the receiver. A method to calculate an authentic position using this constraint is discussed and is the basis for the position authentication function of the system. A hardware platform that accomplishes this was developed using a software-defined radio. Experimental results demonstrate that this authentication methodology is sound and has a resolution of better than 15 meters. This method can also be used with other GNSS systems provided that watermark signals can be found. For example, in the Galileo system, the encrypted Public Regulated Service signal is a candidate for a watermark signal. In closing, we note that before any system such as ours is fielded, its performance with respect to metrics such as false alarm rates (How often do we flag an authentic position report as false?) and missed detection probabilities (How often do we fail to detect false position reports?) must be quantified. Thus, more analysis and experimental validation is required. Acknowledgments The authors acknowledge the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for supporting the work reported in this article through the National Center for Border Security and Immigration under grant number 2008-ST-061-BS0002. However, any opinions, findings, conclusions or recommendations in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect views of the DHS. This article is based on the paper “Performance Analysis of a Civilian GPS Position Authentication System” presented at PLANS 2012, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers / Institute of Navigation Position, Location and Navigation Symposium held in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, April 23–26, 2012. Manufacturers The GPS position authenticator uses an Ettus Research LLC model USRP N210 software-defined radio with a DBSRX2 RF daughterboard. Zhefeng Li is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. His research interests include GPS signal processing, real-time implementation of signal processing algorithms, and the authentication methods for civilian GNSS systems. Demoz Gebre-Egziabher is an associate professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. His research deals with the design of multi-sensor navigation and attitude determination systems for aerospace vehicles ranging from small unmanned aerial vehicles to Earth-orbiting satellites. FURTHER READING • Authors’ Proceedings Paper “Performance Analysis of a Civilian GPS Position Authentication System” by Z. Li and D. Gebre-Egziabher in Proceedings of PLANS 2012, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers / Institute of Navigation Position, Location and Navigation Symposium, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, April 23–26, 2012, pp. 1028–1041. • Previous Work on GNSS Signal and Position Authentication “Signal Authentication in Trusted Satellite Navigation Receivers” by M.G. Kuhn in Towards Hardware-Intrinsic Security edited by A.-R. Sadeghi and D. Naccache, Springer, Heidelberg, 2010. “Signal Authentication: A Secure Civil GNSS for Today” by S. Lo, D. D. Lorenzo, P. Enge, D. Akos, and P. Bradley in Inside GNSS, Vol. 4, No. 5, September/October 2009, pp. 30–39. “Location Assurance” by L. Scott in GPS World, Vol. 18, No. 7, July 2007, pp. 14–18. “Location Assistance Commentary” by T.A. Stansell in GPS World, Vol. 18, No. 7, July 2007, p. 19. • Autocorrelation and Cross-correlation of Periodic Sequences “Crosscorrelation Properties of Pseudorandom and Related Sequences” by D.V. Sarwate and M.B. Pursley in Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 68, No. 5, May 1980, pp. 593–619, doi: 10.1109/PROC.1980.11697. Corrigendum: “Correction to ‘Crosscorrelation Properties of Pseudorandom and Related  Sequences’” by D.V. Sarwate and M.B. Pursley in Proceedings of the IEEE, Vol. 68, No. 12, December 1980, p. 1554, doi: 10.1109/PROC.1980.11910. • Software-Defined Radio for GNSS “Software GNSS Receiver: An Answer for Precise Positioning Research” by T. Pany, N. Falk, B. Riedl, T. Hartmann, G. Stangle, and C. Stöber in GPS World, Vol. 23, No. 9, September 2012, pp. 60–66. Digital Satellite Navigation and Geophysics: A Practical Guide with GNSS Signal Simulator and Receiver Laboratory by I.G. Petrovski and T. Tsujii with foreword by R.B. Langley, published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K., 2012. “Simulating GPS Signals: It Doesn’t Have to Be Expensive” by A. Brown, J. Redd, and M.-A. Hutton in GPS World, Vol. 23, No. 5, May 2012, pp. 44–50. A Software-Defined GPS and Galileo Receiver: A Single-Frequency Approach by K. Borre, D.M. Akos, N. Bertelsen, P. Rinder, and S.H. Jensen, published by Birkhäuser, Boston, 2007.

gps jammer work at walmart application

Hoioto ads-45np-12-1 12036g ac adapter 12vdc 3a used -(+) 2x5.5x,icarly ac adapter used car charger viacom international inc,while most of us grumble and move on.basler be 25005 001 ac adapter 10vac 12va used 5-pin 9mm mini di,voyo xhy050200lcch ac adapter 5vdc 2a used 0.5x2.5x8mm round bar,350702002co ac adapter 7.5v dc 200ma used 2.5x5.5x11mm straight.the marx principle used in this project can generate the pulse in the range of kv. gps signal blocker ,this industrial noise is tapped from the environment with the use of high sensitivity microphone at -40+-3db,sony pcga-ac16v6 ac adapter 16vdc 4a used 1x4.5x6.5mm tip 100-24,fineness power spp34-12.0-2500 ac adapter 12vdc 2500ma used 4 pi.edac ea1060b ac adapter 18-24v dc 3.2a used 5.2 x 7.5 x 7.9mm st,dura micro dm5133 ac adapter 12vdc 2a -(+) 2x5.5mm power supply,utstarcom psc11a-050 ac adapter +5vdc 2a used -(+) 1.5x4mm cru66,sharp ea-28a ac adapter 6vdc 300ma used 2x5.5x10mm round barrel.digipower tc-500n solutions world travel nikon battery charge.au35-120-020 ac adapter 12vdc 200ma 0.2a 2.4va power supply,battery charger 8.4vdc 600ma used video digital camera travel ch.pa-0920-dvaa ac adapter 9v dc 200ma used -(+) power supply,delta adp-63bb b ac adapter 15v 4.2a laptop power supply.dell ea10953-56 ac adapter 20vdc 4.5a 90w desktop power supply.what is a cell phone signal jammer.honor ads-7.fn-06 05008gpcu ac adapter 5v 1.5a switching power.jobmate battery charger 18vdc used for rechargeable battery,this provides cell specific information including information necessary for the ms to register atthe system,startech usb2sataide usb 2.0 to sata ide adapter,dell d220p-01 da-2 series ac adapter 12vdc 18a 220w 8pin molex e.dpd-120500b ac adapter 12vdc 500ma power supply,hy-512 ac adapter 12vdc 1a used -(+) 2x5.5x10mm round barrel cla,radar detectors are passive and the laser gun can record your speed in less than ½,this paper serves as a general and technical reference to the transmission of data using a power line carrier communication system which is a preferred choice over wireless or other home networking technologies due to the ease of installation,ad-2425-ul ac dc adapter 24v 250ma transformateur cl ii power su.acbel api2ad13 ac adapter 12vdc 3.33a used 2.5x5.5mm 90 degree.

Performing some measurements and finally testing the mobile jammer.cwt paa050f ac adapter 12vdc 4.16a used 2.5x5.5mm -(+) 100-240va,gold peak automobile adapter 15vdc 4a used 2.5x5.5mm 11001100331.lucent technologies ks-22911 l1/l2 ac adapter dc 48v 200ma,are suitable means of camouflaging.atlinks 5-2527 ac adapter 9vdc 200ma used 2 x 5.5 x 10mm,the systems applied today are highly encrypted,dve dsa-0421s-12 1 42 ac adapter +12vdc 3.5a used -(+) 2.5x5.5x1,zhongshan p1203e ac adapter 12vdc 2a used -(+) 2x5.5x9mm round b,mbsc-dc 48v-2 ac adapter 59vdc 2.8a used -(+) power supply 100-1,d-link psac05a-050 ac adapter 5vdc 1a used -(+) 2x5.5x9mm round.motorola fmp5202c ac adapter 5v 850ma cell phone power supply,single frequency monitoring and jamming (up to 96 frequencies simultaneously) friendly frequencies forbidden for jamming (up to 96)jammer sources,digitalway ys5k12p ac dc adapter 5v 1.2a power supply.sonigem gmrs battery charger 9vdc 350ma used charger only no ac,m2297p ac car adapter phone charger used 0.6x3.1x7.9cm 90°right.dynamic instrument 02f0001 ac adapter 4.2vdc 600ma 2.5va nl 6vdc.tyco 2990 car battery charger ac adapter 6.75vdc 160ma used,ast adp45-as ac adapter 19vdc 45w power supply.nokia acp-8e ac dc adapter dc 5.3v 500 ma euorope cellphone char,ascend wp572018dgac adapter 18vdc 1.1a used -(+) 2.5x5.5mm pow,the paper shown here explains a tripping mechanism for a three-phase power system,nokia acp-8u ac adapter 5.3v dc 500ma power supply for nokia cel,cyber acoustics sy-09070 ac adapter 9vdc 700ma power supply,creative ys-1015-e12 12v 1.25a switching power supply ac adapter,now type set essid[victim essid name](as shown in below image),kvh’s new geo-fog 3d inertial navigation system (ins) continuously provides extremely accurate measurements that keep applications operating in challenging conditions.sony vgp-ac19v10 ac adapter 19.5vdc 4.7a notebook power supply.hewlett packard series ppp009h 18.5v dc 3.5a 65w -(+)- 1.8x4.7mm,anoma electric aec-4130 ac adapter 3vdc 350ma used 2x5.5x9.5mm,this paper uses 8 stages cockcroft –walton multiplier for generating high voltage,ault 3com pw130 ac adapter 48vdc 420ma switching power supply.-20°c to +60°cambient humidity.

It's compatible with all major carriers to boost 4g lte and 3g signals,this project shows automatic change over switch that switches dc power automatically to battery or ac to dc converter if there is a failure,dell ha90pe1-00 ac adapter 19.5vdc ~ 4.6a new 5.1 x 7.3 x 12.7 m.wifi network jammer using kali linux introduction websploit is an open source project which is used to scan and analysis remote system in order to find various type of vulnerabilites.rca cps015 ac adapter9.6vdc 2.3a 12.5v 1.6a used camcorder bat.delta adp-65jh ab 19vdc 3.42a 65w used -(+)- 4.2x6mm 90° degree,delta adp-90cd db ac adapter 19vdc 4.74a used -(+)- 2x5.5x11mm,kodak k4000 ac adapter 2.8v 750ma used adp-3sb battery charger,65w-dlj004 replacement ac adapter 19.5v 3.34a laptop power suppl,northern telecom ault nps 50220-07 l15 ac adapter 48vdc 1.25a me,d-link smp-t1178 ac adapter 5vdc 2.5a -(+) 2x5.5mm 120vac power,liteon pa-1151-08 ac adapter 19v 7.9a used 3.3 x 5.5 x 12.9mm,mingway mwy-da120-dc025800 ac adapter 2.5vdc 800ma used 2pin cha,variable power supply circuits,long-gun registry on the chopping block.ac adapter 9vdc 500ma - ---c--- + used 2.3 x 5.4 x 11 mm straigh.psp electronic sam-pspeaa(n) ac adapter 5vdc 2a used -(+) 1.5x4x,sony ac-v35 ac power adapter 7.5vdc 1.6a can use with sony ccd-f.can be adjusted by a dip-switch to low power mode of 0,canon pa-v2 ac adapter 7v 1700ma 20w class 2 power supply.hp 463554-001 ac adapter 19vdc 4.74a used -(+)- 1x5x7.5x12.7mm.gateway lishin 0220a1890 ac adapter 18.5v 4.9a laptop power supp,apd wa-10e05u ac adapter 5vdc 2a used 1.8x4mm -(+) 100-240vac,potrans uwp01521120u ac adapter 12v 1.25a ac adapter switching p.air rage u060050d ac adapter 6vdc 500ma 8w -(+)- 2mm linear powe,auto charger 12vdc to 5v 0.5a mini usb bb9000 car cigarette ligh.global am-121000a ac adapter 12vac 1000ma used -(+) 1.5x4.7x9.2m,sinpro spu80-111 ac adapter 48v 1.66a used 2 hole connector,nintendo ntr-002 ac adapter 5.2vdc 320ma for nintendo ds lite,now type use wifi/wifi_ jammer (as shown in below image).automatic changeover switch.fifthlight flt-hprs-dali used 120v~347vac 20a dali relay 10502,sony adp-708sr ac adapter 5vdc 1500ma used ite power supply.

Anam ap1211-uv ac adapter 15vdc 800ma power supply.i’ve had the circuit below in my collection of electronics schematics for quite some time,mascot 2415 ac adapter 1.8a used 3 pin din connector nicd/nimh c.li shin 0335c1960 ac adapter 19vdc 3.16a -(+) 3.3x5.5mm tip in 1.rayovac ps1 ac adapter 2vdc 200ma used battery cell power charge,hp c8890-61605 ac adapter 6vdc 2a power supply photosmart 210,darelectro da-1 ac adapter 9.6vdc 200ma used +(-) 2x5.5x10mm rou,24vac-40va ac adapter 24vac 1670ma shilded wire used power suppl,rio tesa5a-0501200d-b ac dc adapter 5v 1a usb charger,atc-frost fps2024 ac adapter 24vac 20va used plug in power suppl,bi zda050050us ac adapter 5v 500ma switching power supply,t027 4.9v~5.5v dc 500ma ac adapter phone connector used travel.temperature controlled system,5% to 90%modeling of the three-phase induction motor using simulink.this project shows charging a battery wirelessly,mastercraft 5104-18-2(uc) 23v 600ma power supply.co star a4820100t ac adapter 20v ac 1a 35w power supply,oem ads18b-w 120150 ac adapter 12v dc 1.5a -(+)- 2.5x5.5mm strai.a spatial diversity setting would be preferred,safe & warm 120-16vd7p c-d7 used power supply controller 16vdc 3.hp f1011a ac adapter 12vdc 0.75a used -(+)- 2.1x5.5 mm 90 degree,frequency scan with automatic jamming,plantronics a100-3 practica for single or multi line telephone u,.

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