TWA Flight 800
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| TWA Flight 800 | |
|---|---|
| align="center" colspan="2" class="hiddenStructure"|Fatalities
|align="left" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|230
|-
!align="right" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|Injuries
|align="left" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|0
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!bgcolor="#ffcc99" colspan="4"|Aircraft
|-
! align="right" valign="top" |Aircraft type
| align="left" valign="top" width=100% |Boeing 747-131
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! align="right" valign="top" |Operator
| align="left" valign="top" |Trans World Airlines
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! align="right" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|Tail number
| align="left" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|N93119
|-
! align="right" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|Passengers
| align="left" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|212
|-
! align="right" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|Crew
| align="left" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|18
|-
! align="right" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|Survivors
| align="left" valign="top" class="hiddenStructure"|0
|}TWA Flight 800 (TW800, TWA800) was a passenger flight that exploded while flying from John F. Kennedy International Airport (New York) to Charles de Gaulle International Airport (Paris), killing all 230 aboard. The incident has been the most investigated crash in aviation history; the cause of the explosion is still widely debated, even 10 years later. On July 17, 1996, at around 8:45 p.m., the plane, a Boeing 747-131 registered as N93119 and designated by TWA as ship number 17119, exploded in mid-air off Long Island and plunged into the ocean, at , approximately 20 miles southwest of East Hampton, New York, killing all 230 people on board. Passengers included French guitarist Marcel Dadi; composer David Hogan; Jed Johnson, a former member of Andy Warhol's filmmaking team; the wife and niece of jazz saxophonist Wayne Shorter; the sister of comic creator Geoff Johns, who later created the character Stargirl based on her; Portland, Oregon homicide detective Susan Hill; and [Dan Gabor], a University of Arkansas all-American track athlete. Other passengers included 16 members of the French club at Montoursville High School in Pennsylvania and their five chaperones. The aircraft was flying more than eight miles off the coast of East Moriches, New York (on Long Island) when a mid-air explosion occurred. The aircraft developed cracks around the nose as a consequence of the explosion, and the front part of the aircraft broke off (including the cockpit and first class section). The rest of the plane continued to fly for another 30 seconds until it lost momentum and went into a dive. The left wing ruptured, and the leaking fuel from the left wing tank ignited in the air, triggering a second explosion. Both pieces of TWA 800 splashed down into the Atlantic Ocean, and some debris burned on the surface of the ocean. While the above details are generally not in question, the cause of the explosion is a matter of debate. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board's investigation, the only official investigation to date, concluded that the plane's center wing fuel tank exploded when fumes inside the tank ignited. The NTSB concluded that the spark was created by faulty wire insulation and an electrical arc. The theory was solidified upon investigating the poor condition of wiring on other Boeing 747 aircraft of the approximate age. The NTSB contends that the explosion could have been prevented by use of a system to smother flammable vapors inside fuel tanks, rather than the industry standards of the time that focused on eliminating ignition sources that could enter them from the outside. However, this explanation is not universally accepted, and several alternate theories to TWA 800's demise exist. Following the crash, TWA continued to operate flights between New York and Paris under the flight number 924 (return flight number was 925) until its merger with American Airlines in 2001. It retired the number 800 (and return flight number 803) about three weeks after the disaster. CNN aired a 2-hour special on the crash, No Survivors: Why TWA 800 Could Happen Again, on July 15, 2006--nearly ten years to the date the crash.
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Official explanationAfter what has been billed as the longest and most expensive accident investigation in American aviation history, the NTSB investigation's conclusions were adopted on August 23, 2000, just over four years after the disaster.The NTSB concluded that the "probable cause" of the explosion (the language is always guarded) was a small amount of fuel in the center wing fuel tank, which usually used only on long 747 flights. The flammable fuel/air mixture of the center wing fuel tank probably ignited due to electrical fault near the center fuel tank, causing the plane to explode in flight. Paradoxically, a small amount of fuel in a tank is more dangerous than a large amount, since fuel has a higher specific heat capacity, and is slower to heat up than an air mixture. National Geographic's Seconds From Disaster calls this chain of events 'probable' based on evidence, while leaving open other possibilities. Investigators considered the possibility of a criminal or terrorist act during the four-year investigation. Six months after the disaster on January 16, 1997, the NTSB's chairman, Jim Hall, stated, "All three theories - a bomb, a missile or mechanical failure - remain."[link] This is typical of standard scientific procedure, which openly considers all possibilities, until each one can be refuted and a probable cause can be determined, and should be interpreted as such. The FBI's earliest investigations and interviews, later used by the NTSB, were performed under the assumption of a missile attack, a fact noted in the NTSB's final report. However, all agencies involved--the NTSB, FBI and Coast Guard agreed that there was no foul play involved after examining all the plane's recovered wreckage. CNN reported that early in the course of the investigation, terrorists linked to Iran were the prime suspects. Leon Panetta, then chief of staff at the White House, told CNN that had this been the case, President Bill Clinton would have likely declared war on Iran. Speculation at the time and in the years since has been fueled in part by early descriptions, visuals, radar, and eyewitness accounts of this jet disaster, including a sudden explosion and trails of fire in the sky; particularly, trails of fire moving in an upward direction. Investigators said that witnesses who reported seeing a missile actually saw Flight 800 climbing sharply and trailing flames after it exploded. The NTSB produced simulations of the proposed climb[link], but disagreement exists as to whether radar returns from the doomed flight show the necessary ground-speed reduction to match these simulations.[link]
Two unusual pauses in the cockpit voice recorder's tape, each about two microseconds long, and just before the voice recorder cuts off, suggest a short circuit in the electrical system of TWA 800, and provides a framework by which a short circuit could have existed to spark and ignite the center fuel tank of the aircraft. Alternative theories
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