Search and recovery of aircraft parts in ice-sheet crevasse fields using airborne and in situ geophysical sensors

International audience On 30 September 2017, an Air France Airbus A380-800 suffered a failure of its fourth engine while over Greenland. This failure resulted in the loss of the engine fan hub, fan blades and surrounding structure. An initial search recovered 30 pieces of light debris, but the prima...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Glaciology
Main Authors: Mankoff, Kenneth, D, van As, Dirk, Lines, Austin, Bording, Thue, Elliott, Joshua, Kraghede, Rune, Cantalloube, Hubert, Oriot, Hélène, Dubois-Fernandez, Pascale, Ruault Du Plessis, Olivier, Christiansen, Anders Vest, Auken, Esben, Hansen, Karina, Colgan, William, Karlsson, Nanna, B.
Other Authors: Department of Glaciology and Climate, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS), Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, Hanover, USA, Aarhus University Aarhus, DEMR, ONERA, Université Paris Saclay Palaiseau, ONERA-Université Paris-Saclay, DEMR, ONERA Salon-de-Provence, ONERA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-03180141
https://hal.science/hal-03180141/document
https://hal.science/hal-03180141/file/DEMR21017.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2020.26
Description
Summary:International audience On 30 September 2017, an Air France Airbus A380-800 suffered a failure of its fourth engine while over Greenland. This failure resulted in the loss of the engine fan hub, fan blades and surrounding structure. An initial search recovered 30 pieces of light debris, but the primary part of interest, a ~220 kg titanium fan hub, was not recovered because it had a different fall trajectory than the light debris, impacted into the ice-sheet's snow surface, and was quickly covered by drifting snow. Here we describe the methods used for the detection of the fan hub and details of the field campaigns. The search area included two crevasse fields of at least 50 snow-covered crevasses 1 to ~30 m wide with similar snow bridge thicknesses. After 21 months and six campaigns, using airborne synthetic aperture radar, ground-penetrating radar, transient electromagnetics and an autonomous vehicle to survey the crevasse fields, the fan hub was found within ~1 m of a crevasse at a depth of ~3.3 to 4 m and was excavated with shovels, chain saws, an electric winch, sleds and a gasoline heater, by workers using fall-arrest systems.