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Detecting Turbulence

Mathematician Calms the Skies with Turbulence Detection Algorithm

January 1, 2008

A mathematician developed a system that creates a three-dimensional view of turbulence and transmits it to airliner cockpits. The new algorithm analyzes data gathered by Next Generation Doppler Radars and sends a real-time readout of turbulence every five minutes, covering an area up to one hundred miles out in front of a speeding plane.

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Science Insider

WHAT IS TURBULENCE? Air is a gas and water is a liquid, but scientist lump both into the category of fluids. A material is considered a fluid if the amount of force needed to change its shape is dependent on how quickly it changes. For a solid, the force needed to change its shape is dependent on how much it changes. For example, it takes the same amount of force to break a twig quickly as it does to break it slowly. But moving your hand through a body of water quickly will deform the liquid more than if you moved your hand through it slowly. The same phenomenon happens with air, as anyone who has ever stuck a hand out the window of a fast-moving car can attest.
Turbulence is what happens when the flow of air experiences a sudden change in wind speed or direction. This makes it bumpy instead of smooth. We can see turbulent flow in rivers and streams, or even when we stir cream into our morning cup of coffee. And most of us have experienced mild turbulence while flying in an airplane; the plane is flying through a "sea" of air, and sometimes the "waves" are choppy. Many things can cause turbulence: rising warm air, thunderstorms, even strong winds blowing over the tops of mountains, buildings and other objects in its way. Extreme turbulence is caused by severe thunderstorms, tornadoes, or hurricanes; airplanes usually divert their courses to avoid such areas.

Turbulence on flights can be annoying, but passengers are usually safe so long as they keep their seat belts fastened. The bumps and jolts don't really affect the aircraft or its flight path, unless the turbulence is quite severe. Severe turbulence can be avoided by flying around storm cells, or changing to a higher altitude.

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TO GO INSIDE THIS SCIENCE:
John Williams
Mathematician
National Center for Atmospheric Research
303-497-2822

American Meteorological Society
45 Beacon Street
Boston, MA 02108-3693
617-227-2425

The Mathematical Association of America
Mathematical Association of America
1529 18th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036-1358
(202) 387-5200

American Mathematical Society
Providence, RI 02904-2294
800-321-4267


© 2008 American Institute of Physics