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Discovery
Discovery of Microbursts Leads to Safer Air Travel

Researchers investigating several puzzling plane crashes in the mid-1970s identified 'microbursts'--dangerous gusts of wind--as the probable cause. The discovery led to better warning systems and pilot training, and to safer skies.

Microburst caught on film

Microburst caught on film.
Credit and Larger Version

June 25, 2003

During a storm, powerful downdrafts of air can form, blasting towards the Earth with explosive force. Microbursts--drafts only several hundred yards wide--can gust at speeds approaching 150 miles per hour, and can be particularly dangerous for aircraft that are taking off or landing. Before the introduction of Doppler radar weather-detection systems at airports, scientists estimate that microbursts caused as many as 20 major airline accidents, resulting in over 500 deaths.

One of those accidents was the crash of Eastern Airlines Flight 66 as it attempted to land at New York's JFK International Airport in June 1975. University of Chicago meteorologist Tetsuya "Ted" Fujita suspected that microbursts were behind the deadly accident. Fujita was a pioneer in the field of "mesometeorology"--the study of middle-sized weather phenomena such as tornadoes and hurricanes. Collaborating with his wife, Sumiko, he created the F0-F5 tornado severity scale in 1971. Later, as he flew over an area in the Midwest that had been devastated by an outbreak of tornadoes, Fujita noticed a starburst-like pattern in the uprooted trees and the observation led him to theorize about microbursts. The theory met with skepticism at first. Until the mid-1970s, most researchers believed that downdrafts would substantially weaken before reaching the ground and not pose a threat to aircraft. They blamed tornadoes and gust fronts as the primary causes of storm damage.

In 1977, NSF's Geosciences Directorate provided support for Fujita to conduct the NIMROD (Northern Illinois Meteorological Research on Downburst) project in collaboration with the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)--a laboratory for which NSF has been the primary sponsor since its inception in 1960. NIMROD field experiments took place in the spring and summer of 1978, using three Doppler radars and other equipment. NCAR researchers had recommended Doppler because they were finding it effective in "seeing" air motions within storms. On May 29, Fujita and NCAR's James W. Wilson recorded the first microburst observed on radar. What they saw confirmed Fujita's hypotheses. By NIMROD's end, about 50 microbursts had been detected.

NIMROD was followed by further NCAR collaborations with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and researchers at a number of universities. These included the Joint Airport Wind Shear (JAWS) project in Denver, Colorado, in 1982, the Microburst and Severe Thunderstorm (MIST) project near Huntsville, Alabama, in 1986, and the Convective INitiation and Downburst Experiment (CINDE) near Denver in 1987.

The collection and analysis of data developed through these efforts led to widespread agreement that microbursts exist. The findings helped convince the FAA and international aviation authorities to develop radar-warning systems to detect wind shear threats and to institute worldwide training programs. The FAA's Terminal Doppler Weather Radar was installed at major airports throughout the country, and pilots are now required to take microburst and wind-shear training courses and practice maneuvers in flight simulators.

-- Josh Chamot

Investigators
Alfred Rodi
James Wilson
T. Theodore Fujita

Related Institutions/Organizations
NCAR
University of Chicago
University of Wyoming

Locations
Alabama
Colorado
Illinois
Wyoming

Related Awards
#7801074 Project Nimrod
#7921260 Research and Publication of " Downburst Thunderstorms "
#8702993 Studies of the Kinematics and Thermodynamics of Convection Initiation and Microburst Downdrafts in CINDE

Total Grants
$362,000

Related Agencies
Federal Aviation Administration
National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration

Related Websites
NCAR: http://www.ncar.ucar.edu/ncar/
NSF Division of Atmospheric Sciences: http://www.nsf.gov/div/index.jsp?div=ATM
University of Chicago Climate Systems Center (NSF ITR): http://geosci.uchicago.edu/~rtp1/itr/index.html
Bill Nye the Science Guy Describes Microbursts: http://www.nsf.gov/news/mmg/mmg_disp.cfm?med_id=52139&from=search_list

Illustration of an aircraft and microbursts
Illustration of an aircraft and the deadly one-two punch of microbursts.
Credit and Larger Version



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Last Updated:
April 3, 2007
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Last Updated: April 3, 2007