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Research PaperResearchia:202602.24110

AegisSat: Securing AI-Enabled SoC FPGA Satellite Platforms

Huimin Li

Abstract

The increasing adoption of System-on-Chip Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (SoC FPGAs) in AI-enabled satellite systems, valued for their reconfigurability and in-orbit update capabilities, introduces significant security challenges. Compromised updates can lead to performance degradation, service disruptions, or adversarial manipulation of mission outcomes. To address these risks, this paper proposes a comprehensive security framework, AegisSat. It ensures the integrity and resilience of satellite...

Submitted: February 24, 2026Subjects: chip; Chip

Description / Details

The increasing adoption of System-on-Chip Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (SoC FPGAs) in AI-enabled satellite systems, valued for their reconfigurability and in-orbit update capabilities, introduces significant security challenges. Compromised updates can lead to performance degradation, service disruptions, or adversarial manipulation of mission outcomes. To address these risks, this paper proposes a comprehensive security framework, AegisSat. It ensures the integrity and resilience of satellite platforms by (i) integrating cryptographically-based secure boot mechanisms to establish a trusted computing base; (ii) enforcing strict runtime resource isolation; (iii) employing authenticated procedures for in-orbit reconfiguration and AI model updates to prevent unauthorized modifications; and (iv) providing robust rollback capabilities to recover from boot and update failures and maintain system stability. To further support our claims, we conducted experiments demonstrating the integration of these mechanisms on contemporary SoC FPGA devices. This defense-in-depth framework is crucial for space applications, where physical access is impossible and systems must operate reliably over extended periods, thereby enhancing the trustworthiness of SoC FPGA-based satellite systems and enabling secure and resilient AI operations in orbit.


Source: arXiv:2602.19777v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2602.19777v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2602.19777v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2602.19777v1

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Submission Info
Date:
Feb 24, 2026
Topic:
Chip
Area:
chip
Comments:
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