UK Drone Crash Due to GPS Interference
GPS interference caused the DJI Matrice 600 Pro survey drone to drift with the wind UK AIR ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION BOARD
A British survey drone crashed into a house and
fell outside due to GPS interference, according to a report by the U.K.’s Air Accident Board. The 25-pound drone fell from sufficient height
to cause serious injury or death, but fortunately no one was present at the
time.
A second drone sent up to find the crash site
almost suffered the same fate.
The incident occurred in December during a routine
construction site survey with a DJI
Matrice 600 Pro,
essentially a scaled-up version of DJI’s popular consumer quadcopters. Operators had previously noted interference with the satellite
navigation signal, but these had not caused serious problems. On the final
launch though, the drone rose to an altitude of a hundred feet and reported a
GPS compass error.
When this happens the drone automatically reverts
to a manual flight mode and hovers in place. It uses a barometric pressure
sensor to maintain altitude, but without knowing its movement relative to the
ground it drifts with the wind. Normally the operator would take over control,
but in this case they were taken by surprise and the drone sailed behind trees
on a stiff 15 mph wind, disappearing out of sight and manual control range over
an industrial site.
The drone maintained its height above sea level,
but the rising ground meant that it was at rooftop level when it reached a
housing estate a few hundred meters beyond. It struck a house, damaging rotors,
and fell into the garden.
According to the U.K.’s DROPS standard for
industrial safety, a four-pound blunt object falling from six meter, the height
of the fall in this case, can cause injury or death even to someone wearing a
hard hat. The drone was six times as heavy with a correspondingly high risk of
serious injury.
The drone operator launched a second drone to go looking for the crash site, as they had only a rough idea where it was. This also gave a signal interference error and the second drone was quickly and safely landed.
The source of the interference has not been
identified. It may have come from a GPS jammer. Sold as ‘personal privacy
devices’ these can be easily obtained on the internet for $30. These are legal to own, but illegal
to operate in the U.K. They are typically used by truck drivers and others who
do not wish their vehicles location to be recorded, but interfere with all GPS receivers within line of sight. The GPS signal from orbiting satellites is very
weak, equivalent to a car headlight from 12,000 miles away, so is easily
swamped by a nearby transmitter no more powerful than a cellphone.
The incident raises questions over civil drone
safety, especially with larger drones which present a significant injury risk.
Planned drone delivery services, like Google GOOGL ’s
Wing and Amazon’s Prime Air will need robust navigation that will not go
off-course – or crash – when exposed to GPS interference. Especially when there
are many people who do not like the idea of drones flying over their towns and
are willing to act against them. Accidental GPS interference is also an increasing issue, with concern
in the U.S. that the Ligado Networks’ 5G transmitters will interfere with any precision GPS – like
those on survey drones – within two miles.
The incident also underlines the need for military
drones to have methods of navigation other than GPS. Military-grade GPS jammers
and spoofers, which give a false location, are now deployed as anti-drone defenses. Iran claims that it brought down a U.S. RQ-170 Sentinel with GPS spoofing in
2011; such devices are now increasingly available in the commercial sector,
possibly originating with China which seems to use the technology to protect government installations.
While used extensively by others, GPS is a
military system, operated by the U.S. Air Force. It is currently undergoing an
upgrade, known as GPS Block III, estimated at over $5 billion but that will not necessary help prevent
this type of incident.
“The low
power means GPS is really, really, really easy to jam,” says Dana
Goward, President
and Director of the Resilient Navigation and Timing
Foundation. “GPS
III provides jam resistance improvements for military users with special
equipment, but the 99% of users who are civilians won’t get much added benefit
at all.”
Goward says that making GPS truly robust and more
resistant to local interference will mean building a far more extensive
infrastructure and incorporating high-powered ground-based transmitters as well
as satellites.
“We need to
start thinking about the overall architecture. What we need is a multi-layer
architecture, with GPS and other satellites, something like eLoran for a
strong, terrestrial, difficult-to-disrupt regional coverage, and wi-fi, cell
towers, inertial systems and other approaches for the local layers,” says
Goward.
A one-off drone crash in the U.K. causing no
casualties may not seem like a big deal. But some may see it as a sign of
things to come.
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