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Prototyping Galileo Signal Authentication Service: Current Status and Plans
* 1 , 2 , 2 , 2 , 3 , 3 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 6 , 7 , 8 , 9
1  European Commission DG DEFIS
2  European Commission Advisor
3  GMV Aerospace and Defence
4  Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona
5  Airbus Defence and Space
6  European Space Agency
7  European Commission Joint Research Centre
8  KU Leuven
9  European Union Space Programme Agency
Academic Editor: Tomasz Hadas

Published: 01 October 2025 by MDPI in European Navigation Conference 2025 topic PNT Resilience and Robustness
Abstract:

Galileo Signal Authentication Service (SAS) is the next new feature to be offered by Galileo, the European GNSS. Its signal-in-space initial capability is expected already in the next months of 2025, starting with the L3 (Launch 3) Galileo elliptic satellites. It is the first-ever navigation signal authentication feature offered globally and openly. Galileo SAS uses the existing Galileo E6-C signal, to be encrypted, in combination with OSNMA (Open Service Navigation Message Authentication), through the so-called semi-assisted authentication concept. In this concept, portions of the E6-C are re-encrypted with OSNMA future keys and published in a server. The concept allows signal authentication openly and for free, and without private key management by users. In exchange, it has a time between authen-tications of 30s, inherited from OSNMA, and introduces a latency between the E6-C signal reception and its authentication down to a few seconds. This work presents the status of Galileo SAS. It outlines its latest technical definition, already shared in previous publica-tions. It will also present the MMARIO (Message and Measurement Authentication Re-ceiver for Initial Operations) project, developing the first SAS server, receiver and testing platform. The paper also outlines the Galileo SAS plans for the near future, up to the initial service declaration.

Keywords: Galileo; SAS; authentication; spoofing

 
 
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