Saturday, November 24, 2007

Distraction: Smoke Rings at 36 000 feet



Nope. No tobacco was involved in the formation of these. Only plenty of jet fuel. The streaks of jet contrails we see trailing jetliners look like this up close. The spinning vortices are always present in the wake of an airplane due to the sheer velocity of airflow over, and under, the wing surface. These turbulent eddies can be so strong, they can rock a jumbo jet violently. It is a well documented fact that the Boeing 757 'wake turbulence' - as it is termed in the aerodynamic and aviation world- had contributed to a considerable number of aviation incidents and accidents, some fatal.
Anybody who has been close to a passing train, bus or truck would know the rush, or gust, of air in its wake. A jetliner zooms around at speeds 10 times faster. What makes the disturbance potentially deadly for a following aircraft is that it is not always visible like in the picture. Only when there is visible medium, like smoke, through which the wings penetrate can the extent of the vortices be seen. But don't cancel your flight bookings just yet. Years of research and studies have improved the understanding, and hence, the avoidance of wake turbulence related incidents. Around ground level, where the loss of aircraft-control is deadliest, such vortices do not pose substantial danger after 2 minutes. And in the air, standard practices regarding distances between aircrafts pre-empts any potential hazard.

The smoke rings in the photo were visible as moisture in the jet engines' exhaust condensates in the sub-zero temperatures of high altitudes. Even so, the combination of the ambient temperature, exhaust temperature and humidity of the (already dry) surrounding air determine whether or not the visible smoke rings will form. And when they do materialize, they can be such a sight to behold:


Just don't get too close. For the buzz is beyond any tobacco-infused smoke ring could ever muster.

11 comments:

trueblue said...

cantiknyaa...

sina said...

Uhuh~~too heavy for my Sunday. :)

akula said...

Hmmm, and I thought only smokers can do the smoking ring. Hehe

Da Winged Acrophobic said...

trueblue..... cantik kan?

mz..... try it again on Monday.

akula.... I know you can.

Cik Puan Sri Quzz said...

i can also do laa yope... empat segi pon boley!!!
nicee one yope... tu otw gi mana tu?
hehehe...

Da Winged Acrophobic said...

kuzz..... betoi ke ni empat segi? Tunjuk boley? Gambor tu amek over the Pacific from Los Angeles to Tokyo.

Tynna said...

so you are a flyer...hmmm...Mr Wingy...great life...I always wanted to fly but my Daddy said no...

Da Winged Acrophobic said...

blackfeline..... you're still a flyer at heart.

east43street said...

This post is no longer about 'merrily rowing down the stream'. This is about a globe-trotter at work. Thank you for sharing the sky with us.

They say up there is just like highways. All commercial aircrafts would have to follow the routes just like on the highways on land, except you won't see the road.

Betul ke...??

east43street said...

Cantik bro.... memang cantik. When god's creation meets the technology.

Redhead said...

Ive always seen smoke rings in the sky. Ive seen them without really seeing them... never really admired how cool they look...