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Avoiding waves that go bump in the flight

IT STRIKES without warning and can jangle the nerves of even seasoned air travellers - but maybe not for much longer. Clear air turbulence just got a lot easier to predict and avoid.

Two types of turbulence affect aircraft. The first, caused by storms, high winds or the flow of air over mountains, is fairly predictable. Clear air turbulence (CAT) is a different matter: "The skies are clear and blue, everything looks fine, but there is invisible turbulence there and pilots fly through it," says Paul Williams at the University of Reading, UK. As a result, CAT causes hundreds of injuries a year to airline passengers.

The existing method of warning pilots of CAT, called Graphical Turbulence Guidance, relies on pilot reports and observations of the atmosphere, including lightning data, but is not particularly accurate. To improve on these predictions, Williams and his colleagues decided to focus on the cause of the turbulence: the gravity waves generated at the boundary of fast-moving high-altitude jet streams with slower-moving air. Their model uses wind speed measurements to predict where these boundaries lie, and so where the gravity waves are likely to be strongest.

When they applied the model to a 144-day period in 2005 and 2006, and compared the results against actual reports of CAT, it successfully predicted 83 per cent of the reported incidents (Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, DOI: 10.1175/2008JAS2477.1). Results so far are raising hopes that the new forecasting approach may be more effective than the best methods used today, Williams says.

Aviation - Learn more in our comprehensive special report.

Issue 2677 of New Scientist magazine

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Have your say
Comments 1 | 2

Gravity Waves?

Sat Oct 11 00:25:48 BST 2008 by Kevin

I wasn't aware that gravity waves were created by the interaction of two moving streams of gas. This ought to be great news to various attempts to detect them in space. Clearly the experiments need to be put on commuter passenger planes, not satellites!

Gravity Waves?

Sat Oct 11 11:16:02 BST 2008 by Evan

Wikipedia sees the confusion between the two concepts of gravity waves - the following two articles cross-reference each other:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_wave

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_wave

I Must Be Behind In The News. . .

Sat Oct 11 12:46:03 BST 2008 by Matt

I remember just a few years ago they were struggling to detect the large earth shuddering waves caused by universal events. I had no idea that detection has become so sophisticated that such tiny ripples in space time could be detected reliably and practically.

I Must Be Behind In The News. . .

Sun Oct 12 06:25:37 BST 2008 by Don Jennings

Not exactly, more like the bumps of mass that produces changes in local gravity, not spacetime waves. Different dude.

Gravity Waves?

Sat Oct 11 15:01:24 BST 2008 by John

They can be detected already?

Gravity Waves?

Sun Oct 12 20:07:59 BST 2008 by Don Jennings

"They" being real space time gravity waves ALA LIGO or its brothers? The answer so far is a resounding no. LIGO is due for an upgrade to give ten times the sensitivity, not sure when it will be done, but maybe then it will start picking up gravity waves, so far nothing. There is a report that that nothing still means something because there are some gravity waves that should be strong enough to be detected and are not so that constrains the theory about the type of waves generated, binary neutron stars rotating close together or something like that. The bottom line is they still as of this date not detected any form of gravity wave.

Gravity Waves?

Mon Oct 13 13:24:37 BST 2008 by Free Mind

You should be saying Gravitational waves, these are the wave predicted to come from massive stars etc.

Gravity waves are ocean waves and cloud waves, created by the gravity of Earth.

Comments 1 | 2

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