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A trans-Atlantic flight from New York to Paris, which is normally about 5,800 kilometers (3,600 miles) long, could add on another 1,000 kilometers (600 miles)
-- and an hour of flying time -- by being diverted over the Iberian Peninsula. Tracks across the Atlantic normally follow "great circles" -- the shortest path between two points on the globe. They are determined each day by air traffic control centers on both sides of the Atlantic, generally depending on the jet stream from North America to Europe. Planes flying the track system typically follow each other in 10-minute intervals and at altitude levels 1,000 feet (300 meters) apart, in order to maintain safety in airspace which is beyond the range of radar control.
[Associated
Press;
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