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Contrail

 
Contrail

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Contrail



 
 
Contrails (short for "condensation trails") or vapour trails are visible trails of condensed
Condensation

Condensation is the change of the physical state of aggregation of matter from gaseous phase into liquid phase. When the transition happens from the gaseous phase into the solid phase directly, bypassing the liquid phase the change is called Deposition , which is the opposite of sublimation....
 water vapour made by the exhaust of aircraft
Aircraft

An aircraft is a vehicle which is able to flight by being supported by the air, or in general, the atmosphere, of a planet. Examples include balloons, airplanes and helicopters....
 engines. As the hot exhaust gases cool in the surrounding air they may precipitate a cloud of microscopic water droplets. If the air is cold enough, this trail will comprise tiny ice
Ice

Ice is a solid phases of matter, usually crystalline solid, of a non-metallic substance that is liquid or gas at room temperature, such as ammonia ice or methane ice....
 crystals.

The wingtip vortices
Wingtip vortices

Wingtip vortex are tubes of circulating air which are left behind a wing as it generates Lift . One wingtip vortex trails from the Wing tip of each wing....
 which trail from the wingtips and wing flaps
Flap (aircraft)

Flaps are hinged surfaces on the trailing edge of the wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. As flaps are extended, the Stall of the aircraft is reduced....
 of aircraft are sometimes partly visible due to condensation in the cores of the vortices.






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Encyclopedia


Contrails (short for "condensation trails") or vapour trails are visible trails of condensed
Condensation

Condensation is the change of the physical state of aggregation of matter from gaseous phase into liquid phase. When the transition happens from the gaseous phase into the solid phase directly, bypassing the liquid phase the change is called Deposition , which is the opposite of sublimation....
 water vapour made by the exhaust of aircraft
Aircraft

An aircraft is a vehicle which is able to flight by being supported by the air, or in general, the atmosphere, of a planet. Examples include balloons, airplanes and helicopters....
 engines. As the hot exhaust gases cool in the surrounding air they may precipitate a cloud of microscopic water droplets. If the air is cold enough, this trail will comprise tiny ice
Ice

Ice is a solid phases of matter, usually crystalline solid, of a non-metallic substance that is liquid or gas at room temperature, such as ammonia ice or methane ice....
 crystals.

The wingtip vortices
Wingtip vortices

Wingtip vortex are tubes of circulating air which are left behind a wing as it generates Lift . One wingtip vortex trails from the Wing tip of each wing....
 which trail from the wingtips and wing flaps
Flap (aircraft)

Flaps are hinged surfaces on the trailing edge of the wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. As flaps are extended, the Stall of the aircraft is reduced....
 of aircraft are sometimes partly visible due to condensation in the cores of the vortices. Each vortex
Vortex

A vortex is a Rotation, often Turbulence,flow of fluid. Any spiral motion with closed Streamlines, streaklines and pathlines is vortex flow....
 is a mass of spinning air and the air pressure at the centre of the vortex is very low. These wingtip vortices are unrelated to the exhaust from the engines. They are sometimes known as vapour trails.

B 17 Flying Fortress


Condensation from engine exhaust

The main products of hydrocarbon fuel combustion
Combustion

Combustion or burning is a complex sequence of exothermic chemical reactions between a fuel and an oxidant accompanied by the production of heat or both heat and light in the form of either a glow or flames, appearance of light flickering....
 are carbon dioxide and water vapor. At high altitudes this water vapour emerges into a cold environment, and the local increase in water vapour can push the water content of the air past saturation point
Dew point

The dew point is the temperature to which a given parcel of air must be cooled, at constant barometric pressure, for water vapor to Condensation into water....
. The vapour then condenses into tiny water droplets and/or deposits into ice. These millions of tiny water droplets and/or ice crystals form the vapour trail or contrails. The energy drop (and therefore, time and distance) the vapour needs to condense accounts for the contrail forming some way behind the aircraft's engines. The majority of the cloud content comes from water trapped in the surrounding air. At high altitudes, supercooled water vapour requires a trigger to encourage deposition or condensation. The exhaust particles in the aircraft's exhaust act as this trigger, causing the trapped vapour to rapidly turn to ice crystals. Exhaust vapour trails or contrails usually occur above 8000 metres (26,000 feet). where the temperature is below -40°C (-40°F).

Condensation from decreases in pressure

When a wing is generating lift
Lift (force)

In the context of a fluid flow relative to a body, the lift force is the Vector #Vector components of the aerodynamic force that is perpendicular to the oncoming flow direction....
 it causes a vortex
Vortex

A vortex is a Rotation, often Turbulence,flow of fluid. Any spiral motion with closed Streamlines, streaklines and pathlines is vortex flow....
 to form at each wingtip, and sometimes also at the tip of each wing flap. These wingtip vortices
Wingtip vortices

Wingtip vortex are tubes of circulating air which are left behind a wing as it generates Lift . One wingtip vortex trails from the Wing tip of each wing....
 persist in the atmosphere long after the aircraft has past. The reduction in pressure and temperature across each vortex can cause water to condense and make the cores of the wingtip vortices
Wingtip vortices

Wingtip vortex are tubes of circulating air which are left behind a wing as it generates Lift . One wingtip vortex trails from the Wing tip of each wing....
 visible. This effect is more common on humid days. Wingtip vortices can sometimes be seen behind the wing flaps
Flap (aircraft)

Flaps are hinged surfaces on the trailing edge of the wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. As flaps are extended, the Stall of the aircraft is reduced....
 of airliners during takeoff and landing, and during landing of the Space shuttle
Space Shuttle

NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
.

The visible cores of wingtip vortices contrast with the other major type of contrails which are caused by the combustion of fuel. Contrails produced from jet engine exhaust are seen at high altitude, directly behind each engine. In contrast, the visible cores of wingtip vortices are usually seen only at low altitude where the aircraft is travelling slowly after takeoff or before landing, and where the ambient humidity is higher. They trail behind the wingtips and wing flaps rather than behind the engines.

The air inside the intake of a turbo-fan engine
Jet engine

A jet engine is a reaction engine that discharges a fast moving jet of fluid to generate thrust in accordance with Isaac Newton Newton's laws of motion....
 is at a lower pressure than the surrounding air, particularly during high-thrust settings, and may result in a condensation fog forming inside the intake.

Vapour trails or contrails and climate

Vapour trails or contrails, by affecting the Earth's radiation balance, act as a radiative forcing
Radiative forcing

In climate science, radiative forcing is defined as the change in net irradiance at the tropopause. "Net irradiance" is the difference between the incoming radiation energy and the outgoing radiation energy in a given climate system and is thus measured in Watts per square meter....
. Studies have found that vapour trails or contrails trap outgoing longwave radiation emitted by the Earth and atmosphere (positive radiative forcing) at a greater rate than they reflect incoming solar radiation (negative radiative forcing). Therefore, the overall net effect of contrails is positive, i.e. a warming. However, the effect varies daily and annually, and overall the magnitude of the forcing is not well known: globally (for 1992 air traffic conditions), values range from 3.5 mW/m˛ to 17 mW/m˛. Other studies have determined that night flights are mostly responsible for the warming effect: while accounting for only 25% of daily air traffic, they contribute 60 to 80% of contrail radiative forcing. Similarly, winter flights account for only 22% of annual air traffic, but contribute half of the annual mean radiative forcing.

September 11, 2001 climate impact study

The grounding of planes for three days in the United States after September 11, 2001 provided a rare opportunity for scientists to study the effects of contrails on climate forcing. Measurements showed that without contrails, the local diurnal temperature range (difference of day and night temperatures) was about 1 degree Celsius higher than immediately before; however, it has also been suggested that this was due to unusually clear weather during the period.

Condensation trails have been suspect of causing “regional-scale surface temperature” changes for some time. Researcher David J. Travis, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, has published and spoke on the measurable impacts of contrails on climate change in the science journal Nature and at the American Meteorological Society 10th Annual conference in Portland, Oregon. The effect of the change in aircraft contrail formation on the 3 days after the 11th was observed in surface temperature change, measured across over 4,000 reporting stations in the continental U.S.. Travis’ research documented an “anomalous increase in the average diurnal temperature change. The diurnal temperature change (DTR) is the difference in the day's highs and lows at any weather reporting station . Travis observed a 1.8 degree Celsius departure from the two adjacent three-day periods to the 11th-14th.. This increase was the largest recorded in 30 years, more than “2 standard deviations away from the mean DTR”.

Distrails

A 'distrail' is short for dissipation trail. Where an aircraft passes through a cloud, it can clear a path through it; this is known as a distrail. Because the plane's contrail is not yet visible (contrails usually form above 26,000 feet, depending on the temperature and other factors) the distrail looks like a tunnel through the cloud if the cloud is very thin.

See also


Further Reading

  • [www.epa.gov/oms/regs/nonroad/aviation/contrails.pdf EPA Aircraft Contrails Factsheet EPA430-F-00-005]


External links

  • — interactively shows how temperature and humidity of the surrounding air affect contrail formation and characteristics
  • Contrail Studies