Definition
The total error in a navigation system's reported position compared to the aircraft's actual position. NSE combines all sources of error within the navigation equipment itself, including signal-in-space errors (such as GPS satellite or ground-station inaccuracies), receiver processing errors, and any data or computation errors inside the avionics. It is one of the three components that make up Total System Error (TSE) in Required Navigation Performance (RNP) operations, alongside Path Definition Error and Flight Technical Error.
Plain English
How far off the navigation system thinks it is from where the aircraft actually is. It is the equipment's own contribution to position error, before the pilot or autopilot adds any flying error on top.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument flying when studying required navigation performance, where the aircraft must stay within a protected area based on how accurate its navigation system is expected to be.
Derivation
“Navigation” comes from older words connected with moving or directing a vessel. “Error” comes from a Latin word meaning “to wander.” That helps here because NSE is not a moral mistake; it is a measured wandering or difference between the displayed position and the aircraft’s real position.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots must account for these errors to confirm their aircraft meets the accuracy needed for an RNP route or approach.
Analogy
It is like a map app showing your car half a block from where it really is. You may be driving correctly, but the position shown by the system is still off.
Intuition Check
Do not read “errors” here as “pilot mistakes.” NSE means position error inside the navigation system: actual position versus calculated position.
Example Sentence 1
During the RNP approach briefing, the crew noted that low NSE values from the GPS receiver were giving them comfortable margin against the 0.3 NM containment limit.
Example Sentence 2
Lower navigation system errors allow the aircraft to fly tighter routes safely.