Viasat to Deliver Enhanced Military-Grade
Encryption on the First-Ever Link 16-Capable Low
Earth Orbit Spacecraft
June 1, 2021
Viasat Inc. announced it
will integrate its In-line Network Encryptor
(INE) into the world's first Link 16-capable low
earth orbit (LEO) satellite, which Viasat is
developing for the U.S. Air Force Research
Laboratory Space Vehicles XVI program.
Viasat's INE will be the
first crypto deployment on a Link 16-capable LEO
satellite, and will provide communications
security (COMSEC) and additional enhanced
cybersecurity capabilities initially associated
with mission data transfer, with future
evolutions expected to simultaneously secure
user data; telemetry, tracking and command
(TT&C) management; and inter-satellite
communications—at multiple security levels.
Viasat's INE, which was
designed for a very low Size, Weight and Power
(SWaP) constrained system, is expected to
provide radiation-tolerant network encryption
aligned with the LEO space environment and will
be capable of supporting speeds exceeding 100
Megabits per second (Mbps) aggregate throughput,
which makes it an outstanding encryptor to
secure Link 16-to-LEO communications. The INE
will also be able to secure the data flow
between an unclassified spacecraft bus and the
classified processing domain.
"In addition to building
and testing the first-ever Link 16-capable LEO
satellite prototype, Viasat is also focused on
delivering the first high assurance,
fully-programmable crypto deployed in space,"
said Craig Miller, president, Government
Systems, Viasat. "Our focus is on
revolutionizing space-based cryptographic and
cybersecurity solutions by moving away from
embedded, fixed single-application ASICs and
moving to 'plug and play,' fully-programmable,
multi-functional and highly-efficient
military-grade cryptos that can be rapidly
deployed by supporting commercial off the shelf
technology enhancements for small satellites."
Over the past two decades,
Viasat's information assurance business has
achieved a number of industry milestones. The
Company's PSIAM-based rugged, compact Type-1
cryptographic product portfolio already includes
a ground-based satellite TT&C crypto (the
KS-252)—which is currently deployed in the U.S.
Air Force's satellite communications ground
station architectures. This crypto is the
foundation for providing the same innovative,
multi-functional, programmable value proposition
to the space segment.