Identification friend or foe

Identification friend or foe
An IFF Test Set used for testing transponders on aircraft
Model XAE IFF kit, the first radio recognition IFF system in the U.S.

In telecommunications, identification, friend or foe (IFF) is an identification system designed for command and control. It is a system that enables military and national (civilian-located ATC) interrogation systems to identify aircraft, vehicles, or forces as friendly and to determine their bearing and range from the interrogator.

IFF was first developed during World War II. The term is somewhat of a misnomer, as IFF can only positively identify friendly targets but not hostile ones. If an IFF interrogation receives no reply or an invalid reply, the object cannot be identified as friendly, but is not positively identified as a foe.

There are many reasons for friendly aircraft not to reply to IFF, such as battle damage or equipment failure, loss of encryption keys, and wrong encryption keys. Terrain-hugging aircraft are very often poor candidates for microwave line-of-sight systems such as the IFF system. Microwaves cannot penetrate terrain, and very often atmosphere effects (referred to as anomalous propagation) cause timing, range, and azimuth issues.[citation needed]

Contents

Historical

Code generator from German WW II IFF-Radio FuG25-a Erstling

The world's first IFF, FuG-25a "Erstling" (English: "Debut"), was developed in Germany in 1940. It received the radar frequencies on 125 MHz (Freya radar) and 550-580 MHz (Würzburg radar). To start the identification procedure, the ground operator switched the pulse frequency of his radar from 3,750 Hz to 5,000 Hz. The airborne receiver decoded that and started to transmit its code. Before departure, 2 mechanical keys of 10 bits each were inserted into the shown reader. The IFF transmitter worked on 168 MHz with a power of 400 Watt (PEP). Unfortunately for the Germans, British intelligence were able to build their own IFF transmitter, called "Perfectos". When mounted into a RAF Mosquito, it could trigger the FuG-25 and therefore betrayed the position of the nightfighters. To avoid that, the FuG-25 had to be switched off very often.[citation needed]

Method of operation

IFF is used by both military and civilian aircraft. Modes 1, 2, 4 and 5 are for military use only. Modes 1, 2 and 3 are collectively known as Selective Identification Feature (SIF) modes. Civilian aircraft use modes A, C and S. Mode C which includes barometric pressure altitude information is often used in conjunction with mode A. Mode A is often referred to as mode 3/A due to the similarity to the military mode 3. Mode S is a new civilian mode developed to replace both mode A and C.[citation needed]

IFF is also called secondary radar, with primary radar bouncing an RF pulse off of the aircraft to determine position. Position with IFF is determined by comparing antenna dish angle and the delay from the interrogator (1,030 MHz) pulse to the received IFF pulses on (1,090 MHz).[citation needed]

The IFF of World War II and Soviet military systems (1946 to 1991) used coded radar signals (called Cross-Band Interrogation, or CBI) to automatically trigger the aircraft's transponder in an aircraft illuminated by the radar. Modern IFF systems use a separate specialized transponder beacon which can operate without radar. They are referred to as cross-band beacon or transponders.[citation needed]

An IFF transponder responds:

  • in a military aircraft, vehicle, or unit by returning a coded reply signal only when the incoming interrogation is identified as part of the friendly forces network;[citation needed]
  • if no IFF response is generated, a civil (Selective Identification Feature, SIF) interrogation may then be generated and the aircraft, by returning various mode replies can then be identified or sorted.[citation needed]

In an IFF network both the interrogation and the reply are verified as friendly.[citation needed]

Each IFF transponder also has a KIR or KIT cryptography computer associated with it. The KIR (designed for interrogators) and the KIT (designed for transponders) have an access port where the encryption keys are inserted. The military IFF system will not function without a valid key. Civilian SIF systems and mode S do not require encryption keys.[citation needed]

An IFF transponder receives interrogation pulses at one frequency (1,030 MHz), and sends the reply pulses at a different frequency (1,090 MHz). Just the opposite of a SIF interrogation, which is composed of two pulses spaced apart by a different amount for each mode, with the transponder reply being a long series of bits; the IFF interrogation is instead a long series of bits that contains the encrypted message and parity, and the reply is just three pulses.[citation needed]

The IFF message is encrypted with a secret key. IFF transponders with the same secret key will be able to decode the IFF message. Once decoded, the IFF transponder will execute the message and send back a 3 pulse reply. The interrogator then compares each reply to the challenge messages, and marks these targets friendly while also storing their azimuth and range.[citation needed]

A second possibility is a target being marked as a spoof target. That is, the target replies, but fails to process the IFF message correctly on a significant number of challenges. Targets marked as a spoofer can be declared hostile and, inside a battle-space, are often destroyed when able.[citation needed]

If no reply is received from the IFF transponder, the target continues to be an unknown. The IFF system is not used to declare a target hostile if they do not reply. Very often the pilot can have the wrong code (encryption key) selected, or the code is expired, and they will have an audible and visual alarm every time they are interrogated by IFF. If they can't clear the alarm they follow the pre-briefed safe passage procedures.[citation needed]

The major military benefits of IFF include preventing "friendly fire" and being able to positively identify friendly forces.[citation needed]

Modes

Mode 1 – provides 2-digit 5-bit mission code. (military only – cockpit selectable)[1]

Mode 2 – provides 4-digit octal unit code. (military only – set on ground for fighters, can be changed in flight by transport aircraft)[1]

Mode 3/A – provides a 4-digit octal identification code for the aircraft, assigned by the air traffic controller. (military and civilian)[1]

Mode 4 – provides a 3-pulse reply to crypto coded challenge. (military only)[1]

Mode 5 – provides a cryptographically secured version of Mode S and ADS-B GPS position. (military only)[1] Mode 5 is divided into two levels. Both are crypto-secure with Enhanced encryption, Spread Spectrum Modulation, and Time of Day Authentication. Level 1 is similar to Mode 4 information but enhanced with an Aircraft Unique PIN. Level 2 is the same as Mode 5 level one but includes additional information such as Aircraft Position and Other Attributes.[citation needed]

Mode C – provides 4-digit octal code for aircraft's pressure altitude. (military and civilian)[citation needed]

Mode S – provides multiple information formats to a selective interrogation. Typically aircraft are assigned a unique 24-bit Mode S address. The Mode S address is partitioned and a group of address ranges are allocated to each country. Some counties change the assigned address for security reasons, and thus it might not be a unique address. (military and civilian)[citation needed]

Notes

Modes 4 and 5 are designated for use by NATO forces.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e NATO STANAG 4193

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Identification Friend or Foe — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Las siglas IFF/SIF corresponden a la abreviatura inglesa de las palabras Identification Friend or Foe (Identificación Amigo o Enemigo). La primera serie de equipos electrónicos que se construyeron para la… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Identification friend or foe — Système de test IFF utilisé pour contrôler le transpondeur sur les avions …   Wikipédia en Français

  • identification friend or foe — nustatymas, draugas ar priešas statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Sistema, skleidžianti elektromagnetines bangas, į kurias draugiškos pajėgos automatiškai reaguoja, pavyzdžiui, skleisdamos signalus (impulsus), ir tuo būdu išsiskiria iš priešo… …   NATO terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • Identification Friend or Foe — Eine Freund Feind Erkennung (engl. identification friend or foe (IFF)) ist ein elektronisches System, das die Identifizierung eines erkannten Objekts ermöglicht. Meist wird es bei militärischen Radar Systemen eingesetzt, um feindliche… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • identification, friend or foe/selective identification feature procedures — The directives that govern the use of identification, friend or foe selective identification feature equipment. See also identification, friend or foe …   Military dictionary

  • identification friend or foe personal identifier — The discrete identification friend or foe code assigned to a particular aircraft, ship, or other vehicle for identification by electronic means …   Military dictionary

  • identification friend or foe — A secondary radar to identify whether the aircraft, or any other vehicle being interrogated, is friendly or hostile. The interrogator sends a radio signal on a predetermined frequency, which is received by the aircraft. It replies in code, giving …   Aviation dictionary

  • Identification Friend or Foe — IFF, (in Airplanes) electronic device that transmits a 4 digit identification code to the scanning surface radar in order to identify itself as friendly aircraft …   English contemporary dictionary

  • identification, friend or foe — A device that emits a signal positively identifying it as a friendly. Also called IFF. See also air defense …   Military dictionary

  • identification friend or foe — noun a) (in a civilian aircraft) a transponder that responds by sending a code identifying itself b) (in a military aircraft) a transponder that responds by sending a similarly coded signal, only when detecting a code indicating the radar is part …   Wiktionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”