Definition
A radio transmitter or beacon installed at a fixed location on the ground that broadcasts signals aircraft use to determine their position, track a course, or fly an approach. Examples include VOR, NDB, DME, TACAN, and ILS facilities.
Plain English
A piece of navigation equipment that sits on the ground and sends out a signal. Aircraft pick up that signal and use it to figure out where they are or which way to fly.
Context Anchor
Seen in en route navigation and instrument procedure discussions, especially when a route or procedure depends on signals sent from stations on the ground.
Derivation
Ground-based' simply means the equipment lives on the ground, not in the aircraft or in space. This distinguishes it from satellite-based aids like GPS, where the signal source is in orbit. The contrast matters because much of modern navigation is shifting from ground-based to satellite-based.
Why Pilots Care
Supplies reliable navigation references independent of satellites and supports many instrument procedures.
Analogy
A ground-based navigational aid is like a lighthouse for aircraft, except it sends a radio signal instead of a light. The aircraft does not go to the station blindly; it uses the signal as a guide.
Intuition Check
Ground-based does not mean the aid is used only while the aircraft is on the ground. It means the transmitting equipment is located on the ground while the aircraft receives and uses its signal in flight.
Example Sentence 1
The airway between the two airports is defined by a series of ground-based navigational aids, mostly VORs.
Example Sentence 2
When planning the flight, the crew identified available ground-based navigational aids for backup navigation.