An illustration of HawkEye 360's first satellite constellation, called Pathfinder, orbiting Earth. HawkEye 360/UTIAS Space Flight Laboratory

An unprecedented rocket mission for SpaceX, called SSO-A, will launch 64 small satellites at once on Monday.

Three of the satellites belong to HawkEye 360, a startup that aims to "see" radio-wave emissions all over Earth.

HawkEye 360's software will identify each unique radio signal and use it to track "dark ships" that may be trying to hide illegal activities.

The company hopes its system will help curb $3 trillion worth of illegal fishing, smuggling, drug trafficking, and piracy each year.

SpaceX hopes to fire off an unprecedented Falcon 9 rocket mission at 1:32 p.m. ET on Monday from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

If the launch goes well, Elon Musk's aerospace company may not only break spaceflight records, but also help fight illegal activities on the open ocean.

The goal of SpaceX's upcoming mission, called SSO-A, is to put 64 satellites into orbit all at once. A company called Spaceflight Industries organized the mission, and it claims this is the largest-ever rideshare mission in US history, as spacecraft from 35 different companies and organizations will fly aboard the rocket.

Read more: Elon Musk and SpaceX are building a monster rocket for Mars. Here's how big it is compared to 20 familiar objects.

However, three microwave-oven-sized spacecraft on the mission - a cluster called Pathfinder - are particularly worth noting.

An illustration of the SSO-A payload deploying CubeSats and microsatellites. Spaceflight Industries

The trio of spacecraft belong to a startup called HawkEye 360, and they're designed to "see" radio signals from space. The company's software will take unique radio signals coming from ships to "fingerprint" vessels, track them over time, and even forecast future movements.

If Pathfinder works, authorities around the world could gain a major leg up in hunting "dark ships": vessels that turn off GPS location transponders, often to hide their whereabouts and engage in illicit activity.

Such activity includes illegal fishing, smuggling, drug trafficking, and piracy, and it amounts to roughly $3 trillion each year, says John Serafini, the CEO of HawkEye 360.

"We care about the folks that are not doing the right thing. We care about the vessels that don't want to be found," Serafini told Business Insider. "We're focused on detecting those and stopping them."

Hunting 'dark ships' with radio waves

A HawkEye 360 data visualization that shows every instance over a month in which a boat turned off its automatic identification system (AIS) for more than 8 hours. HawkEye 360

HawkEye 360 claims it's unique not only for its radio-signal-detecting technology, but also artificial-intelligence-powered software the startup has developed to process data.

"You couldn't have started this company 10 years ago," Serafini said. "The costs were too high, and the technology wasn't there."

He added that HawkEye 360 exists today because of the increasing miniaturization of electronics, SpaceX's lower-cost rocket launches, and advancements in machine learning.

Pathfinder, like the other satellites SpaceX is launching, will sweep around Earth from pole-to-pole in what's called a sun-synchronous orbit - hence the "SSO" in the mission's name. (The "A" signifies that it's the first of multiple rideshare missions.) This orbit keeps sunlight drenching a spacecraft's solar panels while allowing it to fly over every square inch of the planet.

The antennas of Pathfinder can detect a wide range of radio signals above about 1 watt in power. ("Cell phones are well below a watt in power," Serafini said. "We don't have the ability or the focus to do that.")

This means the cluster can triangulate normally hard-to-pinpoint signals from satellite phones, push-to-talk radios, and marine radar. Ships need these and other radio-emitting tools to navigate the seas, the thinking goes.

This is especially true for "dark ships," since those vessels turn off a mandatory device called an automatic identification system, or AIS. The AIS broadcasts a ship's GPS location to avoid collisions, but turning it off is a common trick vessels use if they're slipping into unapproved fishing zones or trafficking illegal drugs, wares, or people.

Serafini said that may soon cease to be an effective way to avoid getting noticed.

"If you're turning on and off the AIS, we're going to track your other emitters. If you try to turn them all off, you're effectively negating your operation. You need to use them to navigate and communicate," Serafini said. "If you do that, we've won. You can't be effective."

How Pathfinder works

HawkEye 360's three microsatellites that will form its Pathfinder constellation. HawkEye 360

The Pathfinder system relies on the fact that so many brands and models of radio transponders are used by ships. Minor variations in those devices , and the frequencies they use, lead to subtle differences in radio emissions that HawkEye 360 says it can detect and exploit.

More importantly, by tracking a mix of these radio emissions on a ship and pairing those with AIS signals (when the devices are turned on), the company can "fingerprint" every ocean vessel on Earth. That way, even if a ship is "spoofing" its AIS data, the company says it will know; AIS data will report one location, but the vessel's radio fingerprint will reveal its true location.

HawkEye 360 says it has already proved that its system works by equipping three Cessna jet airplanes with Pathfinder technology, flying them over the Chesapeake Bay, and detecting ships that were spoofing their AIS data.

"We were able to not only detect the AIS spoofing but also geolocate the ships using their other radio signals," Chris DeMay, the founder and CTO of HawkEye 360, told Business Insider. "We were able to map where the ship actually was and compare that to where the ship said it was."

Data from HawkEye 360's airplane-based test of its core technology. Blue dots show reported locations, based on automatic identification system (AIS) data, while orange dots show radio-frequency-based locations. Red circles indicate a zone of 95% certainty. HawkEye 360/ESRI

In addition to fingerprinting such vessels, HawkEye 360's machine-learning algorithms will also be able to determine typical activity patterns for a ship and flag any unusual deviation.

Over time, the company says, it could even forecast the future locations of individual vessels based on their past behavior.

"Because we'll be the first ones to do this, we'll be the first ones to bring it to the commercial market," Serafini said.

The future of tracking radio signals from above

"Dark ships" will be targeted by Pathfinder. Jo Yong-Hak/REUTERS

The Pathfinder satellite cluster will give HawkEye 360 a global view of certain radio transmissions on Earth once every four to six hours. But DeMay and Serafini say that's just the beginning.

According to them, HawkEye 360 is backed by about $30 million in funding (enough to operate for 18 months), has 31 employees, and has lined up more than $100 million in future work. In the future, they aim to launch five more three-satellite clusters, which will create a constellation that can map Earth's radio signals once every 30 to 40 minutes.

Launching larger and more capable satellites will also improve the company's ability to detect weaker signals.

"Trucks use radio emitters that we could detect and track," Serafini said. "If a truck is known to have a history of illegal border crossing, we might want to track that particular object."

The company expects the US military to be increasingly interested in the technology, especially considering that HawkEye 360 can deploy its sensors on airplanes and high-altitude balloons (in addition to satellites). That feature could allow for real-time tracking of drones and weak signals on a battlefield.

An illustration of a cell tower transmitting data. HawkEye 360

Another planned use of Pathfinder is more down-to-earth: The technology could detect improper use of the radio-frequency spectrum, including interference between cell-phone towers. Such interference can cause data loss between mobile devices and towers, leading to slow and unreliable internet, among other problems.

Ground crews with trucks typically drive around towers to search for and identify such problems, but such teams and equipment can expensive to deploy, especially on a nationwide scale.

"It's like that Verizon 'Can you hear me now?' guy, but in space," DeMay said - and possibly a lot cheaper and more effective.

This story has been updated. It was originally published on November 7, 2018.

Correction: A previous version of this story stated that HawkEye 360 can uniquely identify individual radios. The company said this may be possible in the future, but noted its current technology can only distinguish between radio emissions of different models and brands. And SSO-A is launching 64 satellites, not 71 (as we previously wrote).

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