Ucrania utiliza equipos electrónicos baratos basados en SDR para atacar las comunicaciones rusas

Una organización sin fines de lucro con sede en los EE. UU. está suministrando a las fuerzas ucranianas equipo de guerra electrónica avanzado ensamblado a partir de componentes simples listos para usar. El secreto es una nueva tecnología conocida como Software Defined Radio (SDR) que sirve, entre otras cosas, para localizar emisores de radio rusas, desde centros de comando hasta operadores de drones. Anteriormente, este tipo de capacidad requería equipo militar costoso y de alta calidad.


A nonprofit organization based in the U.S. is supplying Ukrainian forces with advanced electronic warfare gear assembled from simple off-the-shelf components. The secret is a new technology known as Software Defined Radio (SDR) which can locate Russian radio emitters, from command centers to drone operators. Previously this sort of capability required expensive, high-grade military equipment.

Serge Sklyarenko says his organization, American Ukrainian Aid Foundation, based in New York, is supplying Ukrainian intelligence with a number of the versatile SDR radio kits.

“The beauty of them is they are software defined, meaning they can be reprogrammed in the field to suit a multitude of use cases,” Sklyarenko told me.

In a traditional radio set, the signal from an antenna is processed by dedicated hardware – amplifiers, filters, modulator/demodulators and other components. This means that each radio set is dedicated to one particular type of radio signal, whether it is a 5G cellphone, AM radio, digital television or WiFi. In Software Defined Radio, the only dedicated hardware is the antenna. All the signal processing is carried out digitally with a computer. Simply by changing the programming, an SDR can extract the signal for cellphone, radio, Bluetooth, or any other defined waveform. One device can do everything.

While simple in theory, SDR initially required a tremendous amount of computing power, and it took a push by DARPA in the 2010s to make the technology viable. DARPA has continued to pour research funds into SDR development including an advanced system-on-a-chip demonstrated by Raytheon last year using standard IntelINTC +2.3% hardware.

Now open-source SDR kits are available on the consumer market, and Ukraine is putting them to good use.

“The SDRs are a basic coherently operated, five-channel receiver,” says Sklyarenko. “While signals analysis is generally quite classified we sent these radios for the basic purpose of ‘fox hunting’ or direction finding. Essentially they are listening for spurious radio transmissions.”

fox hunt is a contest between ham radio operators to locate a hidden radio transmitter, usually just for fun. But in this case the game is deadly serious.

Analog direction finding is essentially a matter of rotating a directional antenna to find the strongest signal; by using with several antennas, or moving to different locations, the source can be located by triangulation. Digital direction finding is more sophisticated and uses the difference in phase between the signal across multiple channels.

Previously, this type of radio direction finding gear was bulky and could cost tens of thousands of dollars. The new technology shrinks it to palmtop size, and, with open-source SDR software and cheap processors like the Raspberry Pi brings cost down to a few hundred.

Since early on in the war, Ukrainian volunteers have been able to listen in to much of the Russian military radio traffic, due to Russia’s lack of modern radio equipment, and even jamming them by transmitting raucous heavy metal on the same frequency. The fox hunting SDR kits will allow Ukrainian operators to pinpoint Russian transmissions and target them with mortars, artillery, HIMARS or other weapons.

In particular, the technology can locate the Chinese-made DJI quadcopters used by Russian forces as well as their operators on the ground.

“It is very public knowledge than you can use SDRs to locate DJIs,” says Sklyarenko.

The SDR receivers could locate all radio emitters across a wide area, including for example air defense radars and Russian electronic warfare systems used to jam GPS. Russia has a wide variety of such systems. For more distant sources, this would require a network of SDRs linked together to form a large-scale sensor net. This concept was already explored in DARPA’s RadioMap project. Ukraine may be the first nation to implement this concept on a large scale, thanks to abdundant, low-cost receivers.

“It would be great to cover the entire country with SDRs,” says Sklyarenko.

DARPA’s RadioMap aimed to localize all radio emitters across a wide area. SDR may allow Ukraine to achieve this. DARPA

The receivers are so small they can even be carried on drones. Signals intelligence is useful not just for locating individual transmitters, but can identify the position of units from their radio traffic, and spot movement as a headquarters deploy into an area.

While radio intercepts can determine location, the most important Russian military communications are encrypted, making them impossible to break into. That might change.

“We imagine SDRs could be used for a lot more interesting applications, for example intercepting transmissions for decryption on supercomputers. But they won’t tell us,” says Sklyarenko. “All we know is that these are in high demand, and we are happy to help sending them.”

Fuente: https://www.forbes.com