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Integrated Cyberattack Detection for Satellites

Dr. Patrick Jauernig — Managing Director
SANCTUARY Systems GmbH
Engineering Technology AI for Satellite Cybersecurity Cybersecurity Situational Awareness Systems Analysis Systems Engineering & Integration

Schedule

Talk Wednesday, May 27, 2026 · 8:30 AM · Technical Stage
Q&A Wednesday, May 27, 2026 · 9:00 AM · Posters Area – Kiosk 1

Abstract

Next-generation satellites are evolving into highly interconnected cyber-physical platforms, where heterogeneous subsystems, widespread adoption of Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) components, and emerging multi-tenant payload paradigms fundamentally reshape the spacecraft threat landscape. These trends erode traditional trust assumptions and necessitate autonomous onboard cybersecurity mechanisms capable of detecting, localising, and mitigating attacks without reliance on continuous ground intervention.

This paper presents a novel integrated Monitoring and Control (M&C) subsystem that introduces cybersecurity anomaly detection and recovery services to sustainably secure the rapidly evolving landscape of satellite architectures. The subsystem comprises deep learning-driven system bus monitoring and static rule enforcement, onboard computer (OBC) log monitoring, and recovery strategies for other subsystems. The deep learning-based monitoring module continuously observes system bus communications without perturbing nominal operations, enabling real-time situational awareness at the system level. The underlying model is extremely small and fast, as it is based on recurrent autoencoders with four layers and 8,465 trainable parameters, yet it precisely detects subtle structural and temporal deviations indicative of cyberattacks. Lightweight rule-based detectors and machine learning-based log analysis complement the learning-based bus monitoring, providing fast baseline detection and robustness against model blind spots. When an anomaly is detected, the framework performs automated root cause analysis to identify responsible communication, enabling fine-grained isolation and recovery of compromised subsystems. Two recovery approaches are presented, based on subsystem software redundancy, and a lightweight method leveraging the SpaceWire Remote Memory Access Protocol.

Extensive experimental evaluation demonstrates strong detection performance and operational feasibility. The system bus anomaly detector achieves a 97.18% true negative rate with low false positive rates on benign traffic, and F1 scores of 89.88% for denial-of-service attacks, 92.70% for full-payload interference, and 82.95% for partial frame corruption. Our breadboard prototype yields an inference latency of 24 ms per analysis window, validating real-time onboard applicability under realistic resource constraints.

Authors

  • Dr. Marco Chilese — Senior Security Architect
    SANCTUARY Systems GmbH
  • Dr. Richard Mitev — Senior Security Architect
    SANCTUARY Systems GmbH
  • Giannis Mouzenidis — Junior Software Engineer
    Junior Software Engineer
  • Dr. Patrick Jauernig — Managing Director
    SANCTUARY Systems GmbH
  • Daniel Fortún Sánchez — Avionics Developer
    GMV GmbH
  • Martín Bárez Alonso — Space Avionics Engineer
    GMV GmbH