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Auteurs principaux: Xiao, Yuzhou, Huang, Linan, Sun, Jiachen, Liu, Peilong, Jiang, Chunxiao, Kuang, Linling
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2026
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03678
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author Xiao, Yuzhou
Huang, Linan
Sun, Jiachen
Liu, Peilong
Jiang, Chunxiao
Kuang, Linling
author_facet Xiao, Yuzhou
Huang, Linan
Sun, Jiachen
Liu, Peilong
Jiang, Chunxiao
Kuang, Linling
contents Satellite communication networks operate under stringent computational constraints and are susceptible to sophisticated cyberattacks. This paper introduces a novel defense framework that decouples security optimization into ground-based analysis and onboard real-time execution. In the long-term loop, the ground segment processes historical data to estimate key statistical parameters of the task environment. Additionally, we incorporate the time-varying characteristics of satellite wireless links to account for the dynamic communication context. In the short-term loop, the satellite employs a receding horizon optimization that models dynamic task arrivals and maximizes a utility function considering detection rates and resource costs. To counter intelligent adversaries interception, we introduce a deception mechanism using Bayesian persuasion theory. By strategically manipulating the short-term action sequences in the telemetry downlink, we mislead an external attacker's beliefs. We mathematically model the attacker's optimal response under channel uncertainty and demonstrate that our framework significantly reduces attacker utility. The approach's effectiveness is formally proven using Lyapunov theory.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_03678
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle STARDIS: Strategic Scheduling and Deceptive Signaling for Satellite Intrusion Detection System Deployment
Xiao, Yuzhou
Huang, Linan
Sun, Jiachen
Liu, Peilong
Jiang, Chunxiao
Kuang, Linling
Computer Science and Game Theory
Satellite communication networks operate under stringent computational constraints and are susceptible to sophisticated cyberattacks. This paper introduces a novel defense framework that decouples security optimization into ground-based analysis and onboard real-time execution. In the long-term loop, the ground segment processes historical data to estimate key statistical parameters of the task environment. Additionally, we incorporate the time-varying characteristics of satellite wireless links to account for the dynamic communication context. In the short-term loop, the satellite employs a receding horizon optimization that models dynamic task arrivals and maximizes a utility function considering detection rates and resource costs. To counter intelligent adversaries interception, we introduce a deception mechanism using Bayesian persuasion theory. By strategically manipulating the short-term action sequences in the telemetry downlink, we mislead an external attacker's beliefs. We mathematically model the attacker's optimal response under channel uncertainty and demonstrate that our framework significantly reduces attacker utility. The approach's effectiveness is formally proven using Lyapunov theory.
title STARDIS: Strategic Scheduling and Deceptive Signaling for Satellite Intrusion Detection System Deployment
topic Computer Science and Game Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03678