Composable Post-Quantum Security for FADEC-Coupled Dual-Spool Turbofan Cyber-Physical Systems
Pith reviewed 2026-05-09 19:16 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Channel uncertainty shortens post-quantum key renewal periods in turbofan controls
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In a stochastic hybrid model for these systems, plant evolution, communication latency, leakage, adversarial channel quality, and cryptographic state evolve under a common filtration. This enables showing that channel uncertainty tightens admissible key-renewal periods, ciphertext expansion enters bus-level schedulability constraints, and sensing and actuator limits shape integrity thresholds and allowable control delay. The approach further relates PUF smooth min-entropy to distinguishing advantage and connects innovation statistics to conservative alarm design.
What carries the argument
The stochastic hybrid model in which all system quantities evolve under a common filtration
If this is right
- Channel uncertainty tightens the admissible periods for key renewal.
- Ciphertext expansion must be accounted for in bus-level schedulability checks.
- Sensing and actuator limits determine integrity thresholds and control delay bounds.
- PUF smooth min-entropy determines the distinguishing advantage against the system.
- Innovation statistics support the design of conservative alarms.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The modeling technique could be extended to analyze post-quantum security in other cyber-physical systems such as electric vehicle controls or industrial automation.
- Control system designers may need to co-optimize security parameters together with controller gains to meet all constraints at once.
- Future work could validate the predictions by implementing the lattice-based schemes on avionics hardware and testing stability under realistic channel conditions.
Load-bearing premise
Plant evolution, communication latency, leakage, adversarial channel quality, and cryptographic state all evolve under a common filtration in the stochastic hybrid model.
What would settle it
An experiment or simulation that varies channel uncertainty and checks whether the maximum safe key-renewal interval decreases exactly as the model predicts; deviation from this relation would falsify the claim.
read the original abstract
We develop a unified mathematical formulation for post-quantum authenticated telemetry and actuation in FADEC-coupled dual-spool turbofan cyber-physical systems. The formulation integrates lattice-based key establishment under LWE/SIS-style assumptions, PUF-derived attestation entropy, authenticated encryption, radar-altimeter integrity, avionics-bus timing, and Kalman residual monitoring in a stochastic hybrid model. Within this model, plant evolution, communication latency, leakage, adversarial channel quality, and cryptographic state evolve under a common filtration. We show that channel uncertainty tightens admissible key-renewal periods, that ciphertext expansion enters bus-level schedulability constraints, and that sensing and actuator limits shape integrity thresholds and allowable control delay. We further relate PUF smooth min-entropy to distinguishing advantage and connect innovation statistics to conservative alarm design. Overall, the results characterize how post-quantum security, real-time schedulability, and closed-loop stability interact in safety-critical aerospace control architectures within a defensive analytical treatment that does not provide operational guidance for interference with real platforms.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript develops a unified stochastic hybrid model for post-quantum authenticated telemetry and actuation in FADEC-coupled dual-spool turbofan cyber-physical systems. It integrates lattice-based key establishment under LWE/SIS assumptions, PUF-derived attestation entropy, authenticated encryption, radar-altimeter integrity, avionics-bus timing, and Kalman residual monitoring. Within this model, plant evolution, communication latency, leakage, adversarial channel quality, and cryptographic state are asserted to evolve under a common filtration. The authors claim to show that channel uncertainty tightens admissible key-renewal periods, ciphertext expansion enters bus-level schedulability constraints, sensing and actuator limits shape integrity thresholds and allowable control delay, PUF smooth min-entropy relates to distinguishing advantage, and innovation statistics connect to conservative alarm design.
Significance. If the model construction and derivations are made rigorous, the work could offer a valuable framework for quantifying interactions between post-quantum cryptographic overhead, real-time schedulability, and closed-loop stability in safety-critical aerospace CPS. The composable, defensive analytical treatment and explicit connections between crypto parameters and control metrics represent a strength for interdisciplinary analysis. However, without explicit probability-space construction or validation examples, the immediate applicability to system design remains limited.
major comments (1)
- The central claim that plant evolution (continuous-time differential equations), communication latency, leakage, adversarial channel quality, and cryptographic state (discrete key renewal, PUF entropy, LWE/SIS lattice operations) all evolve under a single common filtration is load-bearing for the derived results on tightened key-renewal periods, schedulability constraints, and alarm design. The manuscript states this unification but provides no explicit construction of the underlying probability space (e.g., product measure combining the physical Wiener process, discrete cryptographic randomness, and adversarial channel measure) or verification that the generated filtration is right-continuous and complete without introducing spurious cross-domain dependence. This leaves the conditional expectations and innovation statistics used in the tightness and integrity claims formally undefined.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the thoughtful review and for highlighting the potential interdisciplinary value of the unified stochastic hybrid model. We address the major comment on the probability-space construction below and will strengthen the formal foundations in the revision.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The central claim that plant evolution (continuous-time differential equations), communication latency, leakage, adversarial channel quality, and cryptographic state (discrete key renewal, PUF entropy, LWE/SIS lattice operations) all evolve under a single common filtration is load-bearing for the derived results on tightened key-renewal periods, schedulability constraints, and alarm design. The manuscript states this unification but provides no explicit construction of the underlying probability space (e.g., product measure combining the physical Wiener process, discrete cryptographic randomness, and adversarial channel measure) or verification that the generated filtration is right-continuous and complete without introducing spurious cross-domain dependence. This leaves the conditional expectations and innovation statistics used in the tightness and integrity claims formally undefined.
Authors: We agree that an explicit construction of the underlying probability space would make the common filtration and associated conditional expectations fully rigorous. The current manuscript asserts the unification at the level of the joint stochastic hybrid dynamics but does not expand the product measure or verify right-continuity and completeness. In the revised version we will add a dedicated subsection (or appendix) that defines the probability space as the product Ω = Ω_plant × Ω_crypto × Ω_channel equipped with the product measure μ = μ_Wiener ⊗ μ_LWE/SIS ⊗ μ_adversary, constructs the natural filtration generated by the continuous and discrete processes, and confirms that its usual augmentation is right-continuous and complete. This addition will render the conditional expectations and innovation statistics used for key-renewal bounds, schedulability, and alarm thresholds formally well-defined without changing any of the derived trade-off results. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: results are consequences of stated model assumptions, not reductions to inputs
full rationale
The manuscript presents a stochastic hybrid model with the common-filtration assumption as a modeling choice that unifies the domains, then derives consequences (tighter key-renewal periods, schedulability constraints, integrity thresholds) inside that model. No equations or self-citations are supplied that define a quantity in terms of itself or rename a fitted parameter as a prediction. The derivation chain therefore remains self-contained; the filtration assumption is an input, not a derived output that loops back to justify itself.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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