Air traffic controllers can track transatlantic flights’ GPS problemsNATS
Disruptions to GPS signals, which began near war zones in Europe and the Middle East, are now affecting the busiest oceanic airspace in the world. More than 1700 transatlantic flights cross the North Atlantic between Europe and North America each day. In recent months, a small but growing number of these flights have lost reliable GPS service over Europe or the Middle East and failed to recover it before the ocean crossing.
“We receive daily reports of aircraft that experience jamming prior to entering oceanic airspace,” says Jane Johnston…
Planes are under attack from GPS jamming – can we find a fix?
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