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Optics, Meteorology, and an Airline Crash Investigation

Optics, Meteorology, and an Airline Crash Investigation. Michael Dubson Physics Dept, U. of Colorado at Boulder (SSP class of 1973). FedEx Flight 1478 Crashed on landing, ½ mile short of runway, Tallahasee Regional Airport, 5:37 am, July 26, 2002. (1.3 hr before sunrise). Boeing 727

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Optics, Meteorology, and an Airline Crash Investigation

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  1. Optics, Meteorology, and an Airline Crash Investigation Michael Dubson Physics Dept, U. of Colorado at Boulder (SSP class of 1973)

  2. FedEx Flight 1478 Crashed on landing, ½ mile short of runway, Tallahasee Regional Airport, 5:37 am, July 26, 2002. (1.3 hr before sunrise)

  3. Boeing 727 BEFORE AFTER Crew of 3: pilot, co-pilot, flight engineer. All 3 survived.

  4. Conditions • Dark, hot, humid • Clear, visibility 8 miles Pilots' view on approach to runway PAPI

  5. PAPI Precision Approach Path Indicator ~keeps plane on 3o glidepath Very Low Very High Good High Low

  6. 4 whites 3o glide path 1 red 20' 2 reds 3 reds 4 reds PAPI 35' 3o runway ground 3o , actually

  7. NTSB investigation determines that crash was due to pilot errors. • FedEx fires all 3 crew. • Union rules allow appeal before a 3-person arbitration board. • Pilots vs. FedEx: Each side hires an "expert" to investigate causes of crash and possibly testify.

  8. PAPI = Precision Approach Path Indicator

  9. PAPI schematic: It's a simple slide projector: slide light source lens

  10. The PAPI Optical System Glass cover plate Red transparency plate Reflector throws light forward to produce brighter beam Empty space below red plate acts as white part of "slide" 2 lenses act effectively as one good lens We have verified correct operation of our reconstructed PAPI system: • brightness • angular width of beam • sharpness of white/red transition • aviation red color

  11. short f long f Focal Length of a Lens focal point parallel rays focal length f > 0

  12. Eye A bundle of parallel rays approaches the eye and some of the rays enter the eye's pupil. No other rays enter the eye. What does the eye see? A) A single point of light, surrounded by blackness. B) A uniformly illuminated wall of light, like a white wall. C) Many scattered points of light, like stars in the night sky. D) None of these

  13. far from source, small bundle of rays is nearlyparallel point source Parallel bundle of rays is created by point source at infinity:

  14. Two point sources of light are imaged onto a screen by a converging lens as shown. The images are labeled 1 and 2. A mask is used to cover up the left half of the lens, as shown. What happens to the images on the screen when the mask covers the left half of the lens? 2 1 screen lens mask A) Image 1 vanishes B) Image 2 vanishes C) Something else happens.

  15. A hot copper cube initially at Ti = 40o C, is suspended from a thread outside. The air temperature is a constant T = 20O C. The cube cools. Is it possible that the cube can cool to a final temperature Tf < 20O C? • Yes • No, because this would violate Conservation of Energy • No, because this would violate the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics • No, because of some other reason.

  16. Mechanisms of Heat Transfer • Conduction • Convection • Radiation Direct touching of atoms Bulk motion of hot matter Energy carried by electromagnetic radiation

  17. Dewpoint: temperature of air at which water vapor will precipitate (rain). Dewpoint depends on humidity: high humidity  high dewpoint 100% humidity  Tdewpoint = Tair Water condenses onto a surface when Tsurface < Tdewpoint

  18. Condensation on glass cover plate strongly scatters light clear glass fogged glass • Small droplets scatter much more strongly than large droplets: • You can see through glass with rain drops on it, but not through fogged glass. • You can see through falling rain, but not through clouds or fog. • Scattering is very strong because droplet size  wavelength of light  strong diffraction

  19. PAPI clear

  20. PAPI fogged

  21. Human Perception of Color The human brain perceives color largely by comparing different colors in the visual field.

  22. Pink PAPI lights can look white when compared with red runway or cockpit lights. Pilots' view on approach to runway PAPI

  23. Conditions were ideal for condensation: • 100% humidity (Temperature = dew point) • Clear sky: Objects that can see the sky cool by radiation. • Time is just before dawn: PAPI and surroundings have had all night to cool. • PAPI was turned on remotely by pilots only 3 minutes before landing. PAPI front coverplate surface takes at least 10 minutes to defog. • Airport employees reported fogging of windows.

  24. My conclusions: • Extremely likely that PAPI's fogged, causing pilots to see 4 whites (too high). • Pilots made multiple errors, but PAPI fogging was the final contributing factor leading to the crash • NTSB conclusions: • Crash due solely to pilot errors. • PAPIs operated normally. • Arbitration board conclusions: • Crash due solely to pilot errors. • (I was not asked to testify because my conclusions contradict pilots' testimony that they saw PAPI 2 whites/ 2 reds.)

  25. Physics involved: • Geometrical Optics • Scattering by diffraction • Heat transfer mechanisms • Meteorology • Perception of color

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