Visible to the public Secure Estimation and Control for Cyber-Physical Systems Under Adversarial Attacks

TitleSecure Estimation and Control for Cyber-Physical Systems Under Adversarial Attacks
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsFawzi, H., Tabuada, P., Diggavi, S.
JournalAutomatic Control, IEEE Transactions on
Volume59
Pagination1454-1467
Date PublishedJune
ISSN0018-9286
Keywordsactuators, adversarial attacks, Algorithm, compressed sensing, control system synthesis, critical infrastructure, critical infrastructures, Decoding, Estimation, fault tolerant control, feedback, feedback control loops, feedback controller, linear system control, Linear systems, resilient output feedback controller design, resilient state estimators, secure cyber-physical system control, secure cyber-physical system estimation, secure local control loop, security of data, sensor attacks, Sensor systems, stability, state estimation, system stabilization, Vectors
Abstract

The vast majority of today's critical infrastructure is supported by numerous feedback control loops and an attack on these control loops can have disastrous consequences. This is a major concern since modern control systems are becoming large and decentralized and thus more vulnerable to attacks. This paper is concerned with the estimation and control of linear systems when some of the sensors or actuators are corrupted by an attacker. We give a new simple characterization of the maximum number of attacks that can be detected and corrected as a function of the pair (A,C) of the system and we show in particular that it is impossible to accurately reconstruct the state of a system if more than half the sensors are attacked. In addition, we show how the design of a secure local control loop can improve the resilience of the system. When the number of attacks is smaller than a threshold, we propose an efficient algorithm inspired from techniques in compressed sensing to estimate the state of the plant despite attacks. We give a theoretical characterization of the performance of this algorithm and we show on numerical simulations that the method is promising and allows to reconstruct the state accurately despite attacks. Finally, we consider the problem of designing output-feedback controllers that stabilize the system despite sensor attacks. We show that a principle of separation between estimation and control holds and that the design of resilient output feedback controllers can be reduced to the design of resilient state estimators.

URLhttp://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/6727407/
DOI10.1109/TAC.2014.2303233
Citation Key6727407