SIGINT is
a contraction of SIGnal INTelligence,
It is one of the major forms of intelligence.Signals
intelligence satellites are designed to detect
transmissions from broadcast communications
systems such as radios, as well as radars
and other electronic systems.The Interception
of such transmissions can provide information
on the type and location of even low power
transmitters, such as hand-held radios.However,
these satellites are not capable of intercepting
communications carried over land lines, such
as under-sea fiber optic cables.
Signals intelligence (SIGINT) comprises of Communications intelligence
(COMINT) which is directed at the analysis of the source and content
of message traffic. While most military communications are protected
by encryption techniques, computer processing can be used to decrypt
some traffic, and additional intelligence can be derived from analysis
of patterns of transmissions over time. Electronic intelligence (ELINT)
is devoted analysis of non-communications electronic transmissions.
This would include telemetry from missile tests (TELINT), or radar
transmitters (RADINT).
Signal
detection
Whether a signal is human communications (e.g., a radio), the intelligence
collection specialists have to know it exists. If the targeting function
described above learns that a country has a radar that operates in
a certain frequency range, the first step is to use a sensitive receiver,
with one or more antennas that capture signals in every direction,
to find an area where such a radar is operating. Once the radar is
known to be in the area, the next step is to find its location.
If operators know the probable frequencies of transmissions of interest,
they may use a set of receivers, preset to the frequencies of interest.
These are the frequency (horizontal axis) versus power (vertical axis)
produced at the transmitter, before any filtering of signals that do
not add to the information being transmitted. Received energy on a
particular frequency may start a recorder, and alert a human to listen
to the signals if they are intelligible (i.e., COMINT). If the frequency
is not known, the operators may look for power on primary or sideband
frequencies using a spectrum analyzer signals. Information from the
spectrum analyzer is then used to tune receivers to the signals of
interest. For example, in this simplified spectrum, the actual information
is at 800 KHz and 1.2 MHz.
Direction-finding
The earliest, and still common, means of direction finding is to use
directional antennas as goniometers, so that a line can be drawn from
the receiver through the position of the signal of interest. HF/DF
Knowing the compass bearing, from a single point, to the transmitter
does not locate it. Where the bearings from multiple points, using
goniometry, are plotted on a map, the transmitter will be located at
the point where the bearings intersect. This is the simplest case;
a target may try to confuse listeners by having multiple transmitters,
giving the same signal from different locations, switching on and off
in a pattern known to their user but apparently random to the listener.
Individual directional antennas have to be manually or automatically
turned to find the signal direction, which may be too slow when the
signal is of short duration.
Traffic analysis
The study of who is signalling whom and in what quantity .When locations
are known, usage patterns may emerge, and inferences drawn. Traffic
analysis is the discipline of drawing patterns from information flow
among a set of senders and receivers, whether those senders and receivers
are designated by location determined through direction finding, by
addressee and sender identifications in the message, or even MASINT
techniques for "fingerprinting" transmitters or operators.
Message content, other than the sender and receiver, is not necessary
to do traffic analysis, although more information can be helpful.
Satellite
identification system
A satellite identification
system for identifying a communications satellite
from which a broadcast communication signal
is being received by an antenna, wherein
the communication signal includes data identifying
a programmer that broadcast the communication
signal and/or an uplink location from which
the communication signal is broadcast.