Early-Warning System Could Reduce Injuries from In-Flight Turbulence

2023-04-17
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CLIMATEWIRE | Turbulence is more than just an annoyance for frequent fliers. It can cause severe injury to both passengers and crew, and research suggests that climate change will make it worse.

But NASA says it's making progress on a solution that could help pilots anticipate and avoid sudden shifts in air stability.

The technology, under development at NASA's Langley Research Center and involving government, university and private sector experts, anticipates using ground-mounted infrasonic microphones that can pick up ultralow frequencies produced by turbulence — possibly as far as 300 miles away.

If deployed at scale, such microphones could provide an early warning for what’s known as “clear-air turbulence,” the top cause of inflight injuries and fatalities, according to researchers at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom.

Clear-air turbulence differs from other forms of turbulence in several ways, and it can occur without warning at altitudes of 20,000 to 40,000 feet. The unstable air masses can be as much as 100 miles wide and 300 miles long, and they often are found just above the jet stream core, researchers say.

The National Transportation Safety Board reports that 163 people were seriously injured from in-flight turbulence between 2009 and 2022; most of the injuries were to flight crew members. NTSB did not differentiate between clear-air turbulence and weather-induced turbulence.

One recent example occurred in December, when around two dozen passengers were injured on a Hawaiian Airlines flight from Phoenix to Honolulu after the plane experienced severe turbulence about 30 minutes before landing. Twelve of the flight's passengers are now suing, saying that the pilots should have anticipated rough air and instructed passengers to remain buckled in their seats.

Turbulence is expected to get worse too as the world warms.

Scientists at the University of Reading project that the frequency of clear-air turbulence events will double by 2050 and that the intensity of such events will increase by as much as 40 percent.

"Our results confirm that the aviation sector should prepare for a more turbulent future," noted the researchers in their paper, which was published last month in the journal Climate Dynamics.

The NASA research effort could make flight crews, passengers and aircraft more resilient to that future.

"Instead of having to change course when turbulence is encountered, early detection would allow flights to adjust their navigation beforehand, saving fuel and emitting less carbon dioxide into the atmosphere,” a NASA spokesperson wrote in an email.

Infrasound microphones have been a NASA priority since 2007, and the technology underwent early ground testing in 2017 at Langley, where a three-microphone array picked up turbulence 300 miles away, according to NASA. In 2021, researchers tested the technology on two stratospheric glider flights in New Mexico. NASA said the test yielded promising results, and research is ongoing with the agency's private-sector partner, Stratodynamics Inc. of Delaware.

Stratodynamics Vice President Nick Craine said in an interview that data collected from the glider flights is still being analyzed, but he noted it was the "first time in history that an infrasonic signal has been recorded and observed from a fixed-wing, heavier-than-air aircraft."

Sean Bailey, an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at the University of Kentucky and co-researcher on the project, said more work is needed to determine if the technology can be scaled to a complex, global air-traffic system.

But there's little question that climate change will drive demand for new tools to predict and avoid turbulence.

While specific turbulence incidents cannot be directly attributed to climate change, a recent spate of injury-causing turbulence suggests that pilots are running up against more than bad weather, which they normally can avoid by flying above or around such systems.

Jennifer Stroozas of the National Weather Service’s Aviation Weather Center in Kansas City, Mo., said meteorologists rely on radar, satellite imagery and pilot reports to identify conditions for turbulence.

She added that turbulence can be particularly strong during the winter when the jet stream dips southward over the continental United States, where it can intersect with weather systems and produce strong wind shear.

“We’ve had a really active weather patten over the last couple of months with lots of systems going through," she said. "Our turbulence forecasters have been very busy.”

Reprinted from E&E News with permission from POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2023. E&E News provides essential news for energy and environment professionals.

参考译文
预警系统可以减少飞行中乱流造成的伤害
乱流对经常乘飞机的人来说不仅仅是一件烦恼的事。它会对乘客和机组人员造成严重伤害,研究表明气候变化会使情况变得更糟。但美国宇航局表示,他们正在研究一种解决方案,可以帮助飞行员预测和避免空气稳定性的突然变化。这项技术由美国国家航空航天局兰利研究中心开发,政府、大学和私营部门的专家参与其中,预计将使用地面安装的次声波麦克风,这种麦克风可以接收到300英里外的湍流产生的超低频率。据英国雷丁大学的研究人员称,如果大规模部署,这种麦克风可以为所谓的“晴空湍流”提供早期预警,晴空湍流是造成飞机伤亡的首要原因。晴空乱流在许多方面不同于其他形式的乱流,它可能在20,000至40,000英尺的高度毫无预警地发生。研究人员说,不稳定的气团宽可达100英里,长可达300英里,它们通常位于急流核心上方。美国国家运输安全委员会(National Transportation Safety Board)报告称,2009年至2022年间,有163人因飞行中的湍流严重受伤;大多数伤者是机组人员。NTSB没有区分晴空乱流和天气引起的乱流。最近的一个例子发生在去年12月,当时一架从凤凰城飞往檀香山的夏威夷航空公司(Hawaiian Airlines)航班在着陆前30分钟遭遇严重乱流,造成大约24名乘客受伤。该航班上的12名乘客现在正在提起诉讼,称飞行员应该预料到恶劣的空气,并指示乘客在座位上系好安全带。随着全球变暖,预计湍流也会变得更糟。雷丁大学的科学家预测,到2050年,晴空湍流事件的频率将增加一倍,而这种事件的强度将增加40%。我们的研究结果证实,航空业应该为更动荡的未来做好准备,"研究人员在上个月发表在《气候动力学》杂志上的论文中指出。NASA的一名发言人在一封电子邮件中写道:“NASA的研究工作可以使机组人员、乘客和飞机对未来的适应能力更强。在遇到湍流时,早期检测可以让飞机提前调整导航,节省燃料,减少向大气中排放的二氧化碳。”据NASA称,自2007年以来,次声麦克风一直是NASA的优先事项,该技术于2017年在兰利进行了早期地面测试,在那里,一个三麦克风阵列捕捉到了300英里外的湍流。2021年,研究人员在新墨西哥州的两次平流层滑翔机飞行中测试了这项技术。美国国家航空航天局表示,该测试取得了令人鼓舞的结果,目前正在与该机构的私营部门合作伙伴——特拉华州的Stratodynamics公司进行研究。Stratodynamics副总裁尼克·克雷恩(Nick Craine)在接受采访时表示,从滑翔机飞行中收集到的数据仍在分析中,但他指出,这是历史上第一次从比空气重的固定翼飞机上记录和观察到次声波信号。肯塔基大学机械与航空航天工程副教授、该项目的联合研究员肖恩·贝利(Sean Bailey)说:他说,还需要做更多的工作来确定这项技术是否可以扩展到一个复杂的全球空中交通系统。但毫无疑问,气候变化将推动对预测和避免动荡的新工具的需求。 虽然具体的乱流事件不能直接归因于气候变化,但最近一系列造成伤害的乱流表明,飞行员遇到的不仅仅是恶劣天气,他们通常可以通过在这些系统上方或周围飞行来避免这种天气。密苏里州堪萨斯城国家气象局航空气象中心的詹妮弗·斯特鲁萨斯说,气象学家依靠雷达、卫星图像和飞行员报告来确定湍流的情况。她补充说,冬季急流在美国大陆上空向南俯冲时,湍流可能特别强烈,在那里它可能与天气系统相交,产生强烈的风切变。“在过去的几个月里,我们经历了一个非常活跃的天气模式,许多系统都经历了,"她说。我们的湍流预报员一直很忙。经POLITICO, LLC许可,转载自E&E News。版权所有2023。E&E News为能源和环境专业人士提供重要新闻。
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