About DBIS   | Story archive   | Contact DBIS  | DBIS home

Safer Airport Runways

Human Factors Engineers Help FAA Develop User-Friendly Markings

February 1, 2007

The Federal Aviation Administration's new Enhanced Surface Markings Project, developed with the help of human factors engineers, promises to reduce the number of collisions on airport runways. The new markings are a pattern of dashed lines on both sides of a center line located 150 feet before a plane reaches a runway, giving pilots more warning of an upcoming runway. The new standards will also help drivers of surface vehicles like baggage carts, fuel trucks and maintenance carts, which are involved in 20 percent of runway accidents.

read the full story...

Science Insider

Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

BACKGROUND: Major airports around the country will be safer after they implement a new Federal Aviation Administration standard to help prevent collisions on runways by providing pilots with better visual cues. The new standards are based on recent findings from the Enhanced Surface Markings Project, a collaboration between human factors/ergonomics consultants, the FAA and representatives from aviation industry. The goal was to make runway and taxiway markings more conspicuous and usable while still preserving the essential elements of current markings to keep additional training and extra confusion to a minimum. The new markings are currently being used by eight major airports, and will be mandatory for 72 major U.S. airports by June 2008.

ABOUT THE STUDY: Ironically, one of the most complex phases of flight occurs not in the air but on the ground, while taxiing to and from the gate. Low-cost but highly effective alterations in the way that lines are painted on runways and taxiways cold help pilots and ground and tower control personnel to navigate busy runways. One change is modifying the centerline extending 150 feet from the runway holding position with a pattern of dashes on either side, to give a "preview" to the pilots that a runway is approaching. The second change is placing surface-painted holding position signs at all runway intersections and on both sides of the centerline. A third recommendation was not adopted by the FAA: modifying the runway hold line with white dashes instead of yellow, to indicate the runway side and not the taxiway side. A total of 224 pilots participated in the study.

HOW AIRPLANES FLY: Aerodynamic theory rests on two pairs of opposing forces: lift and weight (the pull of gravity), and thrust and drag. A moving body exchanges kinetic energy for potential energy as it gains height. A similar phenomenon occurs with a moving fluid, like air: It exchanges its kinetic energy for pressure. This is the Bernoulli Principle. It simply states that the pressure of any fluid decreases where the speed of the fluid increases. So high-speed flow is linked to low pressure and low-speed flow to high pressure. An airplane's wings are designed to create an area of fast-flowing air (and hence low pressure) above the surface. It doesn't matter whether the object is moving through still air, or whether the air moves around the object. It's the relative difference in speeds between the two that create lift. A wing is basically an airfoil, with a leading edge that is angled to "attack" the air in such a way that it increases the speed of the airflow above the wing, decreasing the pressure there. The air pressure underneath the wing becomes greater than above, and that combination produces lift. When the lift becomes greater than the object's weight, the object will begin to rise.

The Human Factors and Ergonomics Society contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

Video help

Latest stories

  • A Satellite Named Violet and a Student Named Amanda
  • Behind the Scenes with the K-Team
  • Deep Space Discoveries
  • Dogs Fighting Cancer
  • Earthquake! What's Your Risk

Did you know?...

Around 20 percent of runway incursions between 1999 and 202 involved runway vehicles such as baggage and fuel trucks and maintenance carts.

More information on this story

Jennifer Shearman
Public Relations & Corporate Identity Manager
MITRE Corp.
Tel: 781-271-3430
shearman@mitre.org

Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
Santa Monica, CA 90406
Tel: 310-394-1811


© 2011 American Institute of Physics