Lab Home | Phone | Search
Center for Nonlinear Studies  Center for Nonlinear Studies
 Home 
 People 
 Current 
 Affiliates 
 Visitors 
 Students 
 Research 
 ICAM-LANL 
 Publications 
 Conferences 
 Workshops 
 Sponsorship 
 Talks 
 Colloquia 
 Colloquia Archive 
 Seminars 
 Postdoc Seminars Archive 
 Quantum Lunch 
 Quantum Lunch Archive 
 CMS Colloquia 
 Q-Mat Seminars 
 Q-Mat Seminars Archive 
 P/T Colloquia 
 Archive 
 Kac Lectures 
 Kac Fellows 
 Dist. Quant. Lecture 
 Ulam Scholar 
 Colloquia 
 
 Jobs 
 Postdocs 
 CNLS Fellowship Application 
 Students 
 Student Program 
 Visitors 
 Description 
 Past Visitors 
 Services 
 General 
 
 History of CNLS 
 
 Maps, Directions 
 CNLS Office 
 T-Division 
 LANL 
 
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
CNLS Conference Room (TA-3, Bldg 1690)

Seminar

Wide Area Monitoring System Security

Annarita Giani
University of California, Berkeley

A wide area measurement system (WAMS) consists of advanced measurement technology, information tools, and operational infrastructure that facilitate the understanding and management of the increasingly complex behavior exhibited by large power systems. Synchro-phasors or Phase Measurement Units (PMUs) are a technology that offers absolute time-stamped voltage phase measurements and even more detailed voltage profiles at buses in the electricity grid. The first WAMS was installed in 2000 by the Bonneville Power Administration. Only 200 PMUs are already installed in North America. In 2009, the U.S. government announced an investment of 3.4 B $ in energy grid modernization. This investment will include the installation of more than 850 PMUs that will monitor the complete U.S. electric grid. Static-state estimation is a well-known and widely used technique for determining optimal estimates of phase angles ? from noisy real power P, reactive power Q, and voltage magnitude V measurements at generator and large substation buses. This technique permits monitoring the relative phase angles between adjacent generators. Large changes in phase angle between two generators is an early indicator of transient stability problems. Phasor Measurement Units sense the relative phase angle between generators directly and transmit them to a data aggregator. It is crucial to identify any attacks that change PMU measurements since PMU data is used directly and critically for monitoring the power system. In this talk I will begin with a brief survey of cyber security for physical systems. I will then present a taxonomy of cyber-attacks on PMU systems. Following this, I will briefly review WAMS systems and applications. Then, I will present some preliminary research ideas on how to detect integrity attacks on the devices. These attack detection algorithms are based on checking for consistency of the [possibly] corrupted data against the underlying physical models that constrain the phase measurements. The consistency checks are based on static state estimation. I will offer some synthetic simulation results, and close with a discussion of computational and implementation issues that require further exploration.

Host: Misha Chertkov, chertkov@lanl.gov, 665-8119 or the institutional host Frank Alexander, fja@lanl.gov, 665-4518.