How a Solar Radiation Glitch Caused an Airbus Jet to Plunge and Trigger a Global Recall
The aviation world witnessed an unusual disruption this week after Airbus issued a worldwide recall affecting its A320-family aircraft. The move came after a rare computer malfunction linked to solar radiation raised serious safety concerns across the industry.
The issue surfaced during an investigation into an October incident where a JetBlue flight between the US and Mexico suddenly dropped altitude after receiving corrupted data from its onboard systems. The aircraft later made an emergency landing, injuring at least 15 passengers.

Airbus acknowledged in a press release that the grounding could cause delays and cancellations but emphasised that the move is “precautionary and necessary to maintain high safety standards.”
What Triggered the Global Recall?
According to BBC, engineers discovered that intense bursts of cosmic radiation from the Sun could interfere with the computers responsible for processing a plane’s altitude data. This vulnerability affects around 6,000 A320-series aircraft, including the A318, A319, A320 and A321 models.The issue surfaced during an investigation into an October incident where a JetBlue flight between the US and Mexico suddenly dropped altitude after receiving corrupted data from its onboard systems. The aircraft later made an emergency landing, injuring at least 15 passengers.
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How Airlines Are Fixing the Issue
Most aircraft can be restored through a three-hour software update, which several carriers like Wizz Air and EasyJet have already completed. But roughly 900 older jets require full computer replacements, making them temporarily unfit to fly passengers until hardware is updated.Regulators Step In With Emergency Measures
Regulators across Europe, the UK and the US issued emergency airworthiness directives, allowing affected aircraft to operate only “ferry flights” without passengers until repairs are done. Despite the large-scale recall, major airports reported minimal disruptions.Airbus acknowledged in a press release that the grounding could cause delays and cancellations but emphasised that the move is “precautionary and necessary to maintain high safety standards.”









