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by gorkish 840 days ago
I would assume that Starlink needs the GPS signal more for timing than for position though it certainly does need to know its position as well. Some of it is probably also driven by regulatory and UX requirements -- from a consumer standpoint there is a benefit of using GPS reception as a checkpoint before the process proceeds. Under normal operation if the terminal can't receive GPS then it is likely also unable to communicate with Starlink satellites.

One could use a GNSS emulator and this modification to test how the system performs under various GPS fault conditions to quantify it. My hunch is that it's more of a regulatory check than an operational requirement. I suspect the signals from the Starlink satellites themselves are sufficient for the terminal to derive timing and position without having to rely on GPS at all.