Thursday, 1 October 2015

Mystery Contrails

It isn't often that one sees a contrail in the sky which indicates that a jet has turned back - it's usually bad news - so when we saw two on Tuesday evening I took a picture. Others also noticed them - see link here - though their research doesn't seem to have done much to explain the mystery.

3 comments:

  1. Jim Robinson

    In the '70s I remember looking up from my home in southern Vermont to see planes at high altitude come from all points of the compass, though not all at once, and make a 90 degree turn in relatively the same place in the sky. What a contrail pattern they painted. I figured it must have been a military maneuver of some kind. "We fly, that's what we do." Nice descriptive answer from the RAF though.

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  2. not much use in retrospect, but you might find this website useful for identifying which aircraft are overflying you
    http://www.flightradar24.com/

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  3. It's a bit late to get in touch, but I've only just stumbled across this post - when you see patterns as uniform as that, you can be fairly sure it is made by an RAF E3 AWACS surveillance plane on an exercise.

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