Thursday 1 November 2012

Lenticular Clouds, Mount Fuji, Japan

Cloud that looks like a flying saucer appears in Japan. It’s just a lenticular cloud, dangerous for planes
After the recent stunning image of U.S. C-130 Hercules cargo planes flying near the Mount Fuji, here’s another interesting thing spotted near the highest mountain in Japan.

Although it may seem like some sort of cloacking device used to hide an alien spacecraft, the hat-shaped cloud, called “tsurushi-gumo” (Japanese for “hanging cloud”) is just a rare kind of cloud that appeared on Jun. 20 around the Fuji after a strong typhoon hit Japan.
The weird looking cloud is just a lenticular cloud, that disappered after about 30 minutes.
Lenticular clouds (especially those smaller than the one filmed near Mount Fuji) are very well known to pilots that tend to avoid them because of the turbulence of the rotor systems that accompany them.
In 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707 on a round-the-world flight, crashed near Mount Fuji after it suddenly encountered abnormally severe turbulence which imposed a gust load well above the design limit.



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