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How the sun grounded 6000 planes
Thanksgiving travelers were surprised last week when Airbus grounded roughly six thousand A320-family jets for an urgent software rollback. The cause of the delay? Fears of radiation from cosmic rays and solar storms.
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LampLighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2025/12/07
Status: user
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More from the article ...
... The problem came to light on Oct. 30th, when a JetBlue Airways A320 flying from Cancun to New Jersey suddenly dropped in altitude. At least 15 passengers were injured. When investigators dug into the flight-control data, they found that the aircraft's software was vulnerable to "single-event upsets" -- bit-flips caused when a high-energy particle randomly changes a 1 to a 0 (or vice versa), corrupting critical data. In the A320s, some recently installed software wasn't properly hardened against this kind of glitch so, on Nov. 28th, regulators ordered an emergency rollback before the jets could return to service. In most cases, the jets were back in the air the next day. ...
In the A320s, some recently installed software wasn't properly hardened against this kind of glitch so, on Nov. 28th, regulators ordered an emergency rollback before the jets could return to service.
In most cases, the jets were back in the air the next day. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-04 09:06 PM | Reply
"some recently installed software wasn't properly hardened against this kind of glitch"
IOW, it wasn't properly tested as it should have been. Thank goodness no one died because of it. This time.
#2 | Posted by sentinel at 2025-12-07 07:12 AM | Reply
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