Multilateration (MLAT) systems are powerful means for air traffic surveillance. These systems aim to extract, and display to air traffic controllers identification of aircrafts or vehicles equipped with a transponder. They provide an accurate and real-time data without human intervention using a number of ground receiving stations, placed in some strategic locations around the coverage area, and they are connected with a Central Processing Subsystem (CPS) to compute the target (i.e., aircraft or vehicle) position. The MLAT performance strongly depends on system layout design which consists on deploying the minimum number of stations, in order to obtain the requested system coverage and performance, meeting all the regulatory standards with ...