Yet despite this reliance, GNSS remains inherently fragile: low‑power signals transmitted from medium Earth orbit are surprisingly easy to degrade, and the consequences of disruption can be severe.
A new study investigates how “flex power”, a technology that dynamically redistributes satellite signal power to resist interference, affects positioning accuracy and navigation reliability.
Satellite navigation is everywhere today. You might not even notice it, but your phone, car navigation, and even delivery tracking rely on GPS and GNS.
As airlines halt flights and detour around conflict zones, operational ripples can be subtle—but far-reaching.
Spirent Communications, now part of Keysight Technologies, a leading provider of test and assurance solutions for next-generation devices and networks, announced the launch of SimXTRACT, a Global ...
Spirent Communications, now part of Keysight Technologies, has launched SimXTRACT, a GNSS test tool that bridges the gap ...
Built on the latest AG3335 chipset series from long-time partner Airoha, the new modules advance Telit Cinterion's GNSS roadmap. They support space- and power-constrained IoT devices and use cases ...
The war with Iran is laying bare the dangers posed to commercial ships and planes by the rise of GPS interference in and ...
False signals mimicking GPS and GNSS have been creating trouble for flight operations in the Middle East amid the ongoing ...
Telit Cinterion, an end-to-end IoT solutions enabler, announced an expansion of its next-generation GNSS portfolio. The company has added two new dual-band positioning modules: the ultracompact ...
Ukrainian interceptors are successfully countering Russian Geran drones. To counter these, Russia will move to faster ...
For decades, global soil moisture monitoring from space has depended on reference datasets. Satellite observations, while indispensable, are rarely used alone; instead, their retrieval algorithms are ...