Follow this link to skip to the main content
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
NIX - NASA Image eXchange
+ NIX Home
+ Advanced Search
+ External Collections
+ Comment or Question

Media:  IMAGE
Format:  JPEG (544 x 473)
JPEG (1253 x 1089)
JPEG (2976 x 2587)
Date:  05.04.1990
Title:  Wake Vortex Study at Wallops Island
Description:  The air flow from the wing of this agricultural plane is made by a technique that uses colored smoke rising from the ground. The swirl at the wingtip traces the aircraft's wake vortex, which exerts a powerful influence on the flow field behind the plane. Because of wake vortex, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requires aircraft to maintain set distances behind each other when they land. A joint NASA-FAA program aimed at boosting airport capacity, however, is aimed at determining conditions under which planes may fly closer together. NASA researchers are studying wake vortex with a variety of tools, from supercomputers to wind tunnels to actual flight tests in research aircraft. Their goal is to fully understand the phenomenon, then use that knowledge to create an automated system that could predict changing wake vortex conditions at airports. Pilots already know, for example, that they have to worry less about wake vortex in rough weather because windy conditions cause them to dissipate more rapidly.
ID:  EL-1996-00130
Other ID:  L90-5919
Credit:  NASA Langley Research Center (NASA-LaRC)
+ FAQ
+ Privacy
+ Copyright
+ Comment or Question
NASA Official: Bill von Ofenheim
Sponsor: NASA STI (Scientific and Technical Information) Program
Date: 01.20.2004