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James Robinson wrote:
Brian Whatcott wrote: Sounds plausible to me. A direct path from unexpected rain at high altitude (warm massive updraft in cu-nim?) to ice to frozen pitots to loss of rudder limiting. This meteorologist suggests that it would be highly unlikely for the Air France flight to have encountered rain or even supercooled water. He also suggests that the cause, if any, would be from descending air warming rather than an updraft: http://www.weathergraphics.com/tim/af447/ I read this over carefully, a few days ago. It seems like a respectable evaluation. And yes, it is highly unlikely situations which we are addressing. Both the eye-witness testimony of a person observing considerable precipitation at altitude, and the obvious meteorological observation that the higher the air, the colder, and the dryer (in absolute terms). If you accept this, then you have to accept that the water can only have come from below, via meso scale uplift (as the report puts it). That's not to say the uplift was not pulling water up higher than the fatal flight, then dropping it. These buildups are invariably turbulent. Brian W |
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