An Analysis of Three Weather-Related Aircraft Accidents

  • Fujita T
  • Caracena F
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Abstract

Two aircraft accidents in 1975, one at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City on 24 June and the other at Stapleton International Airport in Denver on 7 August, were examined in detail. A third accident on 23 June 1976 at Philadelphia International Airport is being investigated. Amazingly, there was a spearhead echo just to the north of each accident site. The echoes formed from 5 to 50 min in advance of the accident and moved faster than other echoes in the vicinity. These echoes were photographed by National Weather Service radars, 130-205 km away. At closer ranges, however, one or more circular echoes were depicted by airborne and ground radars. These cells were only 3-5 km in diameter, but they were accompanied by downdrafts of extreme intensity, called downbursts. All accidents occurred as aircraft, either descending or climbing, lost altitude while experiencing strong wind shear inside downburst cells.

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Fujita, T. T., & Caracena, F. (1977). An Analysis of Three Weather-Related Aircraft Accidents. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 58(11), 1164–1181. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0477(1977)058<1164:aaotwr>2.0.co;2

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