Anna Raymaker receives funding from the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy for her research. The war in Iran has dominated headlines with reports of airstrikes and escalating ...
Delivery apps are glitching and navigation routes are changing abruptly thanks to electronic warfare disrupting the satellite signals that power everything from missiles to your ride home.
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.
The war with Iran is laying bare the dangers posed to commercial ships and planes by the rise of GPS interference in and around conflict zones.
GPS jamming has made navigation hazardous in the Gulf, spurring efforts to develop alternatives.
A driver’s routine trip turned into an unexpected ordeal when his GPS navigation system directed […] ...
Quantum navigation is proving to be a critical part of that toolset, delivering unjammable, unspoofable, and undetectable navigation with bounded positioning error and strong complementarity to other ...
A new study investigates how “flex power”, a technology that dynamically redistributes satellite signal power to resist interference, affects positioning accuracy and navigation reliability.
Iran may be using a Chinese satellite navigation system to target Israel and United States military assets in the Middle East, intelligence experts say. Former French foreign intelligence director ...
As airlines halt flights and detour around conflict zones, operational ripples can be subtle—but far-reaching.
A back up GPS proposal has caused a high-stakes FCC battle between NextNav’s 5G ambitions and the Z-Wave symphony powering billions of IoT devices.
Iran is faring far better in the confrontation with the US and Israel, which began on February 28 with strikes that left Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dead, than many people could have ...