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1 1 (January 26, 2022)

handle is hein.crs/govefei0001 and id is 1 raw text is: C o g e s o a   R es arc   S e v

January 26, 2022
Aviation Concerns Regarding the Rollout of 5G Wireless
Telecommunications Networks

The rollout of fifth-generation (5G) wireless
telecommunications networks in the United States has
roiled passenger and cargo airlines and other aviation
operators over fears that certain mid-band or C-band 5G
signals could interfere with aircraft radio altimeters. These
concerns prompted the Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) to issue alerts to aircraft operators in late 2021 about
possible flight safety risks. FAA asked aircraft operators for
related data, urged them to educate pilots about potential
disruptions, and prohibited certain flight procedures as a
safety precaution. At the urging of FAA, the Department of
Transportation, the White House, and some Members of
Congress, telecommunications companies agreed to
voluntarily delay the rollout of 5G service near airports,
originally scheduled for early December 2021, until July
2022, to avoid air travel disruptions. This will give FAA
and avionics equipment manufacturers additional time to
more thoroughly assess whether C-band 5G signals might
interfere with flight operations and whether equipment
upgrades or other mitigation actions will be needed to
adequately shield aircraft systems from 5G interference.
Radiofrequency Spectrum and 5G Signals
5G networks are being installed all around the world, but
are being assigned different frequency bands in different
countries. While low-band (below 1 gigahertz (GHz)) and
high-band (above 24 GHz) 5G frequencies pose no
particular concern to aviation, the assignment of C-band
frequencies in the range of roughly 3 to 5 GHz has alarmed
the aviation industry over potential interference with radio
altimeters. Europe has allocated spectrum between 3.4 and
3.8 GHz for C-band 5G, while in Japan, frequencies from
3.4 to 4.1 GHz are assigned. In the United States, the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved use
of spectrum between 3.7 and 3.98 GHz for 5G in 2020, and
subsequently auctioned licenses in this band to
telecommunications providers. U.S. providers paid over
$81 billion for C-band licenses, and are eager to launch
service in order to recoup these costs and realize a return on
investment in 5G technology that will give wireless
customers faster data transmission speeds and greater
reliability than fourth-generation (4G) wireless service.
Potential interference with Radio Altimeters
Worldwide, aviation operators have long used a slice of
radiofrequency spectrum between 4.2 GHz and 4.4 GHz
that is exclusively reserved for radio altimeters. These
devices, frequently installed on airliners, regional and
business jets, turboprops, advanced helicopters, and
military aircraft measure aircraft altitude above the ground
by timing how long it takes for a directional radio
transmission to reach the terrain below and bounce back to
an onboard receiver. Radar altimeters provide input to

aircraft terrain alerting systems that provide pilots with
information and warnings about terrain and obstacle
clearance. Radar altimeters also provide data to automated
flight control systems used for vertical flight guidance at
low altitude, especially during approach to landing. While
airplanes can rely on other systems, including precision
instrument landing systems, to descend to about 200 feet
above the ground, radar altimeters are essential to providing
vertical guidance below 200 feet in low-visibility
conditions when pilots are unable to clearly see the runway.
While such capabilities are essential for all-weather
commercial flight operations, radar altimeters are not
commonly found on small general aviation aircraft.
FAA, along with aviation regulators from other countries,
first raised concerns about wireless deployments in the C-
band in 2015. They cautioned that 5G signals transmitted
on nearby frequencies could potentially interfere with radio
altimeters, particularly if high-powered 5G base stations are
placed close to airport runways. Although not required by
regulation, most radio altimeters currently in use have mask
filters to block signals on nearby frequencies that could be
mistaken for reflected radio altimeter signals. However, it is
uncertain whether these filters will adequately block more
powerful 5G signals in all cases, as radio altimeter signals.
A study by RTCA, an aviation industry technical advisory
group founded as the Radio Technical Commission for
Aeronautics, concluded that expected interference levels
from fundamental 5G emissions in the 3.7-3.98 GHz range
and spurious or stray 5G emissions that bleed over into the
4.2-4.4 GHz band were likely to exceed safe interference
limits for all envisioned 5G transmitter configurations
across all categories of airplanes and helicopters equipped
with radio altimeters. Moreover, it determined that stray 5G
emissions that might bleed over into the band reserved for
radio altimeters would not be considered compliant with
international recommendations for radiofrequency
protection criteria.
The FCC countered that the RTCA findings assume a
worse-case scenario, and that alternative testing found that
FCC-mandated protections, including limits on the strength
of 5G signals and 220 MHz of spectral separation between
5G signals and radio altimeters, would mitigate the
potential for interference. Further, the FCC argued that
properly engineered radio equipment should not be prone to
harmful interference from 5G signals.
Near-Term Mitigation Actions
Telecommunications providers voluntarily pushed back 5G
launch schedules from early December 2021 to January
2022 to provide FAA with additional time to address radio

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