Information about Wake Turbulence
Wake turbulence is turbulence that forms behind an aircraft as it passes through the air. This turbulence includes various components, the most important of which are wingtip vortices and jetwash. Jetwash refers simply to the rapidly moving air expelled from a jet engine; it is extremely turbulent, but of short duration. Wingtip vortices, on the other hand, are much more stable and can remain in the air for up to two minutes after the passage of an aircraft. Wingtip vortices make up the primary and most dangerous component of wake turbulence.
Wake turbulence is especially hazardous during the landing and take off phases of flight, for two reasons. The first is that during take-off and landing, aircraft operate at low speeds and high angle of attack. This flight attitude maximizes the formation of dangerous wingtip vortices. Secondly, takeoff and landing are the times when a plane is operating closest to its stall speed and to the ground - meaning there is little margin for recovery in the event of encountering another aircraft's wake turbulence.

These minima are categorised are as follows:
Common minima are:
In the movie Pushing Tin, air traffic controllers stand at the start of a runway while an airplane lands in order to experience wake turbulence firsthand, although he was more likely being exposed to the jet blast.
Wake turbulence is especially hazardous during the landing and take off phases of flight, for two reasons. The first is that during take-off and landing, aircraft operate at low speeds and high angle of attack. This flight attitude maximizes the formation of dangerous wingtip vortices. Secondly, takeoff and landing are the times when a plane is operating closest to its stall speed and to the ground - meaning there is little margin for recovery in the event of encountering another aircraft's wake turbulence.
This picture from a NASA study on wingtip vortices clearly illustrates the power of this wake turbulence component.
Fixed wing - Level flight
At altitude, vortices sink at a rate of 91 to 152 m per minute and stabilize about 152 to 274 m below the flight level of the generating aircraft. For this reason, aircraft operating greater than 610 m above the terrain are not considered at risk.Helicopters
Helicopters also produce wake turbulence. Helicopter wakes may be of significantly greater strength than those from a fixed wing aircraft of the same weight. The strongest wake can occur when the helicopter is operating at lower speeds (20 - 50 knots). Some mid-size or executive class helicopters produce wake as strong as that of heavier helicopters. This is because two blade main rotor systems, typical of lighter helicopters, produce stronger wake than rotor systems with more blades.Parallel or crossing runways
During takeoff and landing, an aircraft's wake sinks toward the ground and moves laterally away from the runway when the wind is calm. A 3 to 5 knot crosswind will tend to keep the upwind side of the wake in the runway area and may cause the downwind side to drift toward another runway. Since the wingtip vortices exist at the outer edge of an airplane's wake, this can be dangerous.Hazard avoidance
Wake vortex separation
ICAO mandates separation minima based upon wake vortex categories that are, in turn, based upon the Maximum Take Off Mass (MTOM) of the aircraft.These minima are categorised are as follows:
- Light - MTOM of 7,000kg or less;
- Medium - MTOM of greater than 7,000kg, but less than 136,000kg;
- Heavy - MTOM of 136,000kg or greater.
Common minima are:
- Take-off
- Landing
| Preceding aircraft | Following aircraft | Minimum radar separation |
|---|---|---|
| A380-800 | A380-800 | 4 nm |
| Non-A380-800 Heavy | 6 nm | |
| Medium | 8 nm | |
| Light | 10 nm | |
| Heavy | Heavy | 4 nm |
| Medium | 5 nm | |
| Light | 6 nm | |
| Medium | Light | 5 nm |
Staying on or above leader's glide path
Incident data shows that the greatest potential for a wake vortex incident occurs when a light aircraft is turning from base to final behind a heavy aircraft flying a straight-in approach. Light aircraft pilots must use extreme caution and intercept their final approach path above or well behind the heavier aircraft's path. When a visual approach following a preceding aircraft is issued and accepted, the pilot is required to establish a safe landing interval behind the aircraft s/he was instructed to follow. The pilot is responsible for wake turbulence separation. Pilots must not decrease the separation that existed when the visual approach was issued unless they can remain on or above the flight path of the preceding aircraft.Warning signs
Any uncommanded aircraft movements (e.g., wing rocking) may be caused by wake. This is why maintaining situation awareness is so critical. Ordinary turbulence is not unusual, particularly in the approach phase. A pilot who suspects wake turbulence is affecting his or her aircraft should get away from the wake, execute a missed approach or go-around and be prepared for a stronger wake encounter. The onset of wake can be insidious and even surprisingly gentle. There have been serious accidents where pilots have attempted to salvage a landing after encountering moderate wake only to encounter severe wake turbulence that they were unable to overcome. Pilots should not depend on any aerodynamic warning, but if the onset of wake is occurring, immediate evasive action is vital.Accidents/incidents due to wake turbulence
- On June 8, 1966 an XB-70 collided with an F-104. Though the true cause of the collision is unknown, it is believed that due to the XB-70 being designed to have an enhanced wake turbulence to increase lift, the F-104 moved too close, therefore getting caught in the vortex and colliding the wing (see main article).
- Delta Air Lines Flight 9570 crashed at the Greater Southwest International Airport on 30 May 1972 while performing "touch and go" landings behind a DC-10. This crash prompted the FAA to create new rules for minimum following separation from "heavy" aircraft.
- A chartered aircraft with 5 onboard, including In-N-Out Burger's president, Rich Snyder, crashed at John Wayne International Airport on December 15 1993. The aircraft followed in a Boeing 757 for landing, became caught in its wake turbulence, rolled into a deep descent and crashed.
- USAir Flight 427 crashed near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1994. This accident was believed to involve wake turbulence, though the primary cause was a defective rudder control component (see main article).
- American Airlines Flight 587 crashed into the Belle Harbor neighborhood of Queens, New York shortly after takeoff from John F. Kennedy International Airport on November 12, 2001. This accident was attributed to pilot error in the presence of wake turbulence from a Japan Airlines Boeing 747 that resulted in rudder failure and subsequent separation of the vertical stabilizer.
Measurement
Wake turbulence can be measured using several techniques. A high-resolution technique is doppler lidar, a solution now commercially available. Techniques using optics can use the effect of turbulence on refractive index (optical turbulence) to measure the distortion of light that passes through the turbulent area and indicate the strength of that turbulence.Audibility
Wake turbulence can occasionally, under the right conditions, be heard by ground observers. On a still day, heavy jets flying low and slow on landing approach may produce wake turbulence that is heard as a dull roar/whistle. Often, it is first noticed some seconds after the direct noise of the passing aircraft has diminished. The sound then gets louder, sometimes becoming as loud as was the original direct sound of the aircraft. Nevertheless, being highly directional, wake turbulence sound is easily perceived as originating a considerable distance behind the aircraft, its apparent source moving across the sky just as the aircraft did. It can persist for 30 seconds or more, continually changing timbre, sometimes with swishing and cracking notes, until it finally dies away.In Popular Culture
In the movie Top Gun, Lieutenant Pete Mitchell, played by Tom Cruise, suffers 2 "jet washes" or Wake Turbulences. The first one being during a training mission, and he is caught in Tom Kazansky's jet turbulence. (Kazansky is played by Val Kilmer.) In the first jet-wash, Mitchell loses his RIO and best friend, "Goose" as they eject out of the plane. In the second jet-wash, he is with "Merlin" and they are caught in a bogey's jet wash. Mitchell recovers from the turbulence but is shaken up.In the movie Pushing Tin, air traffic controllers stand at the start of a runway while an airplane lands in order to experience wake turbulence firsthand, although he was more likely being exposed to the jet blast.
See also
- Wake (of boats)
External links
- FAA overview
- Meteorology and Wake Vortex Influence on American Airlines FL-587 Accident
- Top Gear Demonstration of 747 Jet Wash (video)
turbulence or turbulent flow is a flow regime characterized by chaotic, stochastic property changes. This includes low momentum diffusion, high momentum convection, and rapid variation of pressure and velocity in space and time.
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Wingtip vortices are regions of high vorticity which develop at the tip of a wing as it flies through the air (or potentially another fluid). Wingtip vortices are a form of induced drag, an essentially unavoidable side-effect of the wing generating lift.
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Wingtip vortices are regions of high vorticity which develop at the tip of a wing as it flies through the air (or potentially another fluid). Wingtip vortices are a form of induced drag, an essentially unavoidable side-effect of the wing generating lift.
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Landing is the last part of a flight, where a flying animal, aircraft, or spacecraft returns to the ground. When the flying object returns to water, the process is called alighting, although it is commonly called "landing" and "touchdown" as well.
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Takeoff is the phase of flight in which an aircraft goes through a transition from moving along the ground (taxiing) to flying in the air, usually on a runway. For balloons, helicopters and some specialized fixed-wing aircraft (VTOL aircraft such as the Harrier), no runway is
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In aviation, a Flight Level (FL) is a standard nominal altitude of an aircraft, referenced to a world-wide fixed pressure datum of 1013.25 mbar or the equivalent setting, 29.921 inHg (the average sea-level pressure).
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helicopter is an aircraft which is lifted and propelled by one or more horizontal rotors, each rotor consisting of two or more rotor blades. Helicopters are classified as rotorcraft or rotary-wing aircraft to distinguish them from fixed-wing aircraft because the helicopter derives
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runway (RWY) is a strip of land on an airport, on which aircraft can take off and land. Runways may be a man-made surface (often asphalt, concrete, or a mixture of both) or a natural surface (grass, dirt, or gravel).
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Formation April 1947
Headquarters Montreal, Canada
Membership 190 member states
Official languages Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish
Secretary General Taïeb Chérif
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Headquarters Montreal, Canada
Membership 190 member states
Official languages Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish
Secretary General Taïeb Chérif
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Manufacturer Airbus
Maiden flight 27 April 2005
Introduced 25 October 2007
Status Certified 12 December 2006
Primary user Singapore Airlines
Number built 10 as of October 2007[1]
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Manufacturer Airbus
Maiden flight 27 April 2005
Introduced 25 October 2007
Status Certified 12 December 2006
Primary user Singapore Airlines
Number built 10 as of October 2007[1]
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Maiden flight 4 March 1954
Introduction 20 February 1958
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Designed by Clarence "Kelly" Johnson
Maiden flight 4 March 1954
Introduction 20 February 1958
Retired 1967, USAF
1975, US ANG
1982, Norway
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Delta Air Lines Flight 9570
Summary
Date 30 May, 1972
Cause wake turbulence
Site Greater Southwest International Airport, Fort Worth, Texas
Fatalities 4
Injuries 0
Aircraft
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Summary
Date 30 May, 1972
Cause wake turbulence
Site Greater Southwest International Airport, Fort Worth, Texas
Fatalities 4
Injuries 0
Aircraft
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Greater Southwest International Airport (IATA: GSW, ICAO: KGSW) was the commercial airport serving Fort Worth, Texas from 1953 until 1972. Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport (or DFW) opened in 1974 on property adjacent to the north side of the airport.
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Type Airliner
Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas
Maiden flight 1970-08-29
Introduction 1971-08-05 with American Airlines
Primary user FedEx
Produced 1968-1988
Number built DC-10: 386
KC-10: 60
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Manufacturer McDonnell Douglas
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Mark Taylor, President
Roger Kotch, CFO
Ken Iriart, VP of Human Resources
Carl Van Fleet, VP of Planning
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Maiden flight 1982-02-19
Introduction 1983-01-01 with Eastern Air Lines
Primary users Delta Air Lines
American Airlines
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United Parcel Service
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Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes
Maiden flight 1982-02-19
Introduction 1983-01-01 with Eastern Air Lines
Primary users Delta Air Lines
American Airlines
United Airlines
United Parcel Service
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USAir Flight 427
Summary
Date September 8 1994
Cause Loss of control
Site Aliquippa, Pennsylvania
()
Origin O'Hare International Airport
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Summary
Date September 8 1994
Cause Loss of control
Site Aliquippa, Pennsylvania
()
Origin O'Hare International Airport
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USAir Flight 427
Summary
Date September 8 1994
Cause Loss of control
Site Aliquippa, Pennsylvania
()
Origin O'Hare International Airport
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Summary
Date September 8 1994
Cause Loss of control
Site Aliquippa, Pennsylvania
()
Origin O'Hare International Airport
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American Airlines Flight 587
Summary
Date November 12, 2001
Cause Pilot error causing structural failure
Site Queens, New York City, United States
Origin John F.
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Summary
Date November 12, 2001
Cause Pilot error causing structural failure
Site Queens, New York City, United States
Origin John F.
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