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Kind: captions Language: en as the sun rose on July 2nd 1937 Amelia aart knew she was in trouble over the radio she called we must be on you but cannot see you gas is running low been unable to reach you by radio we are flying at 1,000 ft beneath her was water in every direction as far as the eye could see she got herself into this predicament through A Series of Unfortunate Events and bad decisions many of them could have been avoided with a better knowledge of physics but even so there was one thing she could have done in this moment one switch she could have flipped that would likely have saved her life and Changed History this video is sponsored by kiwo more about them at the end of the show Amelia aart was vying to become the first female pilot to fly around the world I hope to accomplish something really scientifically worthwhile for Aviation and she wasn't taking any shortcuts other successful circumnavigations had followed a northern route mostly staying close to land but a heart's route would be the longest by following a path close to the equator this meant the last part of her journey was the hardest crossing the full width of the Pacific Ocean the starting point for this Crossing was Lei a city on on the Eastern side of New Guinea at the time it was one of the world's busiest airports a hub of traffic from Asia and Australia at 10:00 a.m. on a hot July day airheart piloted her locki Electra down the runway and took off on what would be her final flight the Pacific Ocean is huge it's way bigger than the Atlantic I mean if you look at the globe from that side you see almost no land the problem was in 1937 most planes could only fly a maximum of a few thousand kilom so airheart removed everything unnecessary from her plane she ripped out the insulation to reduce weight but that made the engine noise so overwhelming she had to communicate with her Navigator sitting right beside her using written notes she packed almost nothing telling her husband extra close clothes and extra food would have been extra weight and extra worry she replaced the passenger seats with fuel tanks effectively turning her plane into a flying gas can but even so the Electra's maximum range was between 6600 and 7200 km in perfect weather it could be just enough to reach Hawaii from Lei or she might come up disastrously short so aart needed a place to stop and refuel along the way now it might seem like there's no land here but if you zoom in there is this tiny Island halfway between Australia and Hawaii Howland Island is just over 2 km long and less than 1 km wide the US had claimed it as part of the guano Islands Act of 1856 but in 1937 it was barely inhabited with just a handful of colonists it would be an ideal to refuel if only it had a Runway fortunately for aart by the time of her round the world flight she was already famous in 1928 she became the first female passenger to cross the Atlantic by airplane this made her an International Celebrity she said she could and she did [Music] it but she wanted to fly herself saying maybe someday I'll try it alone so in 1932 she attempted to Pilot a plane solo across the Atlantic heading for Paris she brought with her only a toothbrush one container of soup and three cans of tomato [Music] juice but storms ice and dense fog battered her small plane a seam in the exhaust manifold cracked and Flames from the engine spewed out into the night gas leaked down her neck from a broken tank and after 14 15 hours she landed in a pasture in Northern Ireland her face was so covered in grease a farmand couldn't tell if she was a man or a woman he asked if she had flown far from America she replied I wish I could have done it faster these Adventures brought her into the orbits of powerful people like the first lady Elanor Roosevelt I'm Mrs Roosevelt won't you go for a ride tonight over walkington it rning lovely from the air at night and using her new connection she lobbied the president to hire her friend Eugene Vidal to head the Bureau of Commerce Vidal had promised aart a runway on Howland Island but red tape stalled progress only months before her planned takeoff so airheart wrote directly to President Roosevelt she explained that the airst strip funds required immediate approval writing please forgive Troublesome female flyer for whom this Howland Island project is key to world flight attempt the president resident approved the project 4 days later and three runways were soon cleared so she had a place to land but how would she find this tiny Speck of an island in a vast ocean well flying with her in the Electra was her Navigator Fred Nunan and he would calculate the flight plan they knew the direction of Howland so they could use the onboard Compass to set their bearing toward it they knew their air speed and could figure out their ground speed by subtracting or adding the wind and then they could calculate how long it should take to reach the island this method is known as dead reckoning but they wouldn't aim directly at the island because if they did that and they didn't see it at the prescribed time they wouldn't know in which direction they were off so instead they intentionally picked a point either north or south of the island let's say they picked South they estimated the trip would take 18 hours so they would fly through day and night and once they had traveled for the calculated length of time they could confidently turn north and spot the island before takeoff the ground crew estimated they would encounter a headwind of 24 kmph but just 20 minutes after takeoff lay radioed air heart to warn that the headwinds would be stronger she didn't acknowledge their message knowing the correct wind speed was critical because it would affect how long it would take to reach the island if it took longer aart would have to turn later so she couldn't rely on dead reckoning alone to reach Howland as an independent check on their location Nunan would take measurements of the sun moon and stars this is known as Celestial navigation he had an almanac that listed 58 navigation stars and the point on Earth each one would be directly overhead for the day and time of his measurement if they found themselves directly under a navigation star well then they would immediately know their position but generally they would not be that lucky so Nunan would measure the angle above the Horizon to a navigation star and use that to work out how far away they were from the point on the Earth where that star would be directly overhead so he could trace out a circle on the globe of possible location and then he would measure the angle to another navigation star and draw out a second Circle and now they must be at one of these two Circle intersections normally the circles were so large that only one of the intersections would be a plausible position that way they could continually update their location and adjust bearings as needed but even with Celestial navigation errors could accumulate over long trips earlier in the journey when air heart across the Atlantic they missed their intended airport in hazy conditions nunan's calculations were reasonable but small errors put them off course luckily in Africa there were plenty of other places to land safely the same could not be said for Howland so for the flight across the Pacific Airhart commandeered three US Navy and Coast Guard ships the atasa would be stationed at Howland Island the Ontario would be half way along the Route and the swan was positioned midway between Howland and Hawaii the atasco would send out smoke signals as airheart approached to help her spot the island but even more importantly All Ships were equipped with radio now in 1937 radio was still fairly new tech German physicist Heinrich Herz discovered radio waves in the late 1880s he excited electrons to oscillate back and forth in his transmitter and a few meters away his receiver was a loop of wire with a small Gap in it when Herz looked at it through a microscope in the dark he saw faint Sparks jumping across the Gap the Sparks were strongest when the receiving Loop was flat if it was vertical then no sparks were observed this demonstrated that radio waves are transverse waves with electric and magnetic fields oscillating perpendicular to each other and perpendicular to the direction of the wave motion when the receiving Loop was aligned with the direction the wave was traveling the changing magnetic field through the loop induced an EMF that created the spark but if the loop was facing the transmitter then there was no change in magnetic flux through the loop and so no spark was observed now Herz couldn't see the future he had ushered in he said I do not think that the Wireless Waves I have discovered will have any practical application but within a few years years people started sending messages using radio and by the 1920s Radio Entertainment broadcast took off ships and planes routinely used radio to send Morse code and some including airheart could send and receive voice messages in fact airheart had five radio antennas around the plane each for a specific purpose the largest antenna could be reeled in and out like a fishing line behind the plane it was 76 M long which was necessary to efficiently send and receive Morse code via the 4 or 500 khz radio waves used by ships and remote stations ideally an antenna should be at least a quarter of the wavelength of the radio wave it's transmitting or receiving this improves the efficiency of the conversion from electrical energy to radiated electromagnetic energy air heart's trailing antenna was only around an eighth of the wavelength but it was connected to a high power transmitter so its signals could still be detected over 1,000 km away next were two antennas for voice Communications on higher frequencies a transmitting V antenna on the roof of the plane and a receiving antenna along its belly higher frequencies were useful for two reasons first they require smaller antennas which save weight and can be better accommodated on small sparse planes and second highfrequency radio waves can travel long distances by bouncing off a layer of the atmosphere called the ionosphere starting about 50 km above Earth's surface radiation from the Sun splits electrons off molecules forming a layer of ions and free electrons radio waves with certain frequencies interact with these free electrons and are effectively reflected back to Earth it's as if they've bounced off a big wobbly mirror in the sky this effect is called skipping and it scatters radio waves all over the place these radio waves can then reflect off the ocean and back off the ionosphere making multiple hops to travel thousands of kilm during the daytime the intense radiation from the Sun means the ionosphere starts lower in denser atmosphere and because of this lower frequency radio waves are more likely to be absorbed than reflected so aviators would typically use the higher 6210 khz to skip their signals during the day and then the lower 3105 k at night once the bottom of the ionosphere had lifted into thinner [Music] air 4 hours after takeoff airheart radioed an update to lay on her daytime frequency of 6210 she reported her altitude at 7,000 ft and speed at 140 knots before concluding with her typical sign off everything okay but she never acknowledged calls from Lei about the headwind they radioed again at 11:20 and 1220 but never got a response from airart in all likelihood she never heard them she did radio 6 hours into her flight to report stronger headwinds but she makes no mention of Lay's earlier warnings it's possible the receiving belly antenna was broken fell off or something in the receiving Electronics wasn't working but her ability to receive voice messages was clearly impaired 9 hours into the flight aart expected to come upon the Ontario she listened for morse code NS on 400 khz but she heard nothing the original plan was that the Ontario would wait for her to radio them to request that they start transmitting but the day before takeoff aart realized she had made a mistake the Ontario had told her they wouldn't be able to receive any highfrequency signals which meant no voice communication so she sent an urgent telegram asking the Ontario to transmit the morse code ends repeatedly 10 minutes after each hour the purpose of the morse code from the Ontario was actually to allow Amelia airheart to make use of her two final antennas so she had a loop antenna just like this one and a sense antenna these were designed to allow her to locate the source of radio waves this was the final and most critical way that airheart planned to stay on course and locate Howland Island she wrote I doubt if I'd try the flight to Tiny Howland Island without it supplementing Fred nunan's skill all right so I have an antenna here and I'm aligning it vertically in this tree how are we how are we there so the Ontario was sending out Morse code signals on their antenna and here we have a transmitter tuned to about 3.6 MHz I'm going to put on uh this blindfold and use the loop antenna to try to locate the transmitter and because I already know where the transmitter is we'll spin me around a few times to really disorient me so uh Clifford oh sorry are you going all right whoa I'm a bit dizzy so the radio waves are going to be emitted in all directions radially away from the antenna the electric field will will be oscillating up and down and the magnetic field will be oscillating back and forth so if I hold up this Loop like this sort of parallel to the direction that the waves are traveling then the magnetic field is going to be changing through the loop and because of that it's going to create uh an EMF and current and I can pick that up because I'm tuned to the right frequency here so I got a fairly strong signal woo it's very strong but if I rotate the loop like that well now the magnetic field is oscillating back and forth but not changing through the loop itself because it's parallel to the loop and so in this orientation I'm going to get a null reading if I turn it this way there's a null but if you turn at 90° now all the magnetic field is passing through this Loop and so I can hear a maximum here so this is what airheart wanted to measure using her loop antenna to detect the repeated n Morse code from the Ontario she would turn it until she found the null and then she would know the direction to the ship something that's interesting is if I turn it away we get another null because again there's no magnetic flux passing through this Loop now the first time she picked up the signal she would probably be heading straight towards the ship or close enough so she would know that it's roughly that way but there's a chance that she's gone past it and if you go past it well then you also get a null but the ship is behind you not in front of you so that's where the sense antenna comes in the sense antenna gives you a cardioid pickup pattern so it has a single null instead of two nulls and so that allows you to determine whether it is in front or behind you if you walk a bit you'll know if it's getting weaker or stronger all right I feel like I've picked the wrong the wrong direction I'll try the I'll try the sense antenna to to see if I can figure it out with the sense antenna the only null points directly away from the transmitter so it's easy to use the sense antenna to check which null is correct but then only use the loop when navigating because it gives a sharper null I I think using the sense antenna that the uh the transmitter is right in front of me now I'm looking for another null here oh there's a null give it a go there there definitely louder louder oh it's funny cuz you move a little bit and then you start hearing signal again this does not feel like I'm walking in the right direction well that's either the right way to go or it's the wrong way to go oh no trying to fly a plane and do this would be very hard especially with the sound of that engine would have been roaring oh feel like it's getting loud it's really loud here it drops out right there I mean there's a null here and I was convinced this was the right way yeah this is a clear null right here whoa loud loud loud feel like I got to be close [Music] it's got to be like right here this worked amazingly well did didn't it I had no idea I was that close that's impressive on the nail that's awesome now aviators could have used where the signal is loudest and try to go uh in that direction but it's actually easier to get a precise null a point where the signal drops out the loud section could range for quite a distance and so you wouldn't really know where it is but the null is more precise so that's why they would look for the point where the signal drops out if airheart could home in on the Ontario using her radio Direction finding Loop that would ensure she was on course and eliminate any navigation errors that may have occurred to that point but her telegram asking the Ontario to transmit 10 minutes after each hour didn't make it to the ship in time and since airheart couldn't talk to the Ontario they never sent out any signals so they passed like ships in the night by this point aart was around halfway to Howland with no other Landing strips within a th000 km she would have to find the tiny island or return to lay now but multiple delays had already plagued her journey in fact this was not air heart's first attempt to fly around the world earlier that year in March of 1937 she had taken off from California for Hawaii heading west instead of East on board were Fred Nunan and another crew member Harry Manning as a Merchant Marine Captain he was an expert in radio Morse code and traditional navigation he was also a pilot the flight to Hawaii was successful thanks in part to Manning using the loop antenna to home in on a radio beacon on the destination [Music] Island 3 days later the trio set off for Howland Island but just as they were taking off the plane drifted to the right aart corrected by throttling back the left motor but it was too much the plane turned to the left and the right wing dipped down going up on one wheel the right landing gear collapsed then the left plane skitted out on its belly spinning around to face the way it had come thankfully no one was hurt but the Electra took months to repair and during that time the seasonal winds shifted so on her next attempt airheart would have to fly East instead of West and most importantly Captain Manning left the crew officially the Press reported that he needed to return to the merchant marines but rumors spread that he had lost confidence in aart or that aart believed Nunan was a better Navigator ler than Manning and she could operate the radio on her own whatever the case when aart took off again 3 months later she was accompanied only by Nunan and now they had made it 80% of the way around the world and in the dark of night aart had to make the critical decision whether to keep going or turn back the lack of signal from the Ontario must have been concerning but maybe they never got her telegram and she knew that at Howland the itasa would be transmitting the letter A over Morse code every half hour even if they didn't hear from her and they could send and receive voice signals they promised to be ready on a range of different frequencies so she flew on around 6:15 a.m. local time radiomen aboard the atasa heard airheart clearly please take a bearing on 3105 we'll whistle into the mic we are about 200 miles out she then began to whistle but the men were confused they expected air heart to take a bearing on them not the other way around and while they had told her that they had radio Direction finding equipment the signal needed to be lower frequency between 270 and 550 khz her voice frequency would skip off the ionosphere and reflect off the ocean scattering in all directions so there would be no way to find a null because the signal would be coming literally from everywhere in the Electra airart heard only static by now she must have been worried that they hadn't heard anything from either ship almost blind from the Rising Sun and deaf from the Roar of the engines aart Twisted the radio dial listening for aasa's response nothing she may have expected Howland to have a highfrequency radio direction finder called an Adcock antenna array these systems solve the skipping problem with five vertical antennas at the corners and center of a square the direction of the radio wave can be calculated from the slightly different arrival times and Signal strengths at each antenna but these antennas were massive so they were really only installed at larger airports now as it happens there was a portable high frequency radio direction finder on Howland Island but the operator reported that air heart's Transmissions didn't last long enough for him to take a bearing and trying to conserve his low battery he missed parts of the later Transmissions around 6:45 aart again asked them to take a bearing on 3105 khz and report back in a half hour but a bearing taken now and reported back in a half hour would be at best outdated and at worst misleading this confusion likely had to do with time zones airheart was using Greenwich civil time but the atasa set their clocks to their current position which was GCT minus 11.5 hours and to make matters worse Howland Island used Hawaii time which back in those days was GCT minus 10.5 hours so the three parties attempting a Rond Vu on a tiny island in the middle of the Pacific were on three different time zones and Cru a heart's hours didn't even line up with the others aart told the atasa she would be using GCT but somehow it never made it to the radiomen so when the atasa heard air heart's request it was 6:45 a.m. but in the cockpit it was 6:15 p.m. so aart likely didn't say in a half hour but on the half hour which for her was only 15 minutes away and also it was a pre-arranged time that airart would be listening for them aart was careful to set times she would transmit and times she would listen for the ship because she could only Power one antenna at a time and the ships used the same antenna for receiving and transmitting so if they both broadcasted at the same time they would miss each other's messages if airheart sent another message at a quarter after the hour the atasa blocked it with their own message cannot take a bearing on 3105 very good please please send on 500 or do you wish to take a bearing on us go ahead please there was no response but she couldn't transmit on 500 khz anyway because she had removed the long trailing antenna that could transmit lower frequencies since it could only be used for morse code something neither She nor Nunan were particularly well versed in she saw it as dead weight after Manning left so after the Hawaii crash it was removed during repairs so she had no way of sending radio waves that would allow the atasa to take a bearing on her but she could take a bearing on the atasa using her loop antenna if they sent her the right frequency before the trip the ataska had asked aart to specify the frequency they should broadcast airheart was unsure so she consulted a radio expert in Lei and they recommended the atasa send Morse code a just repeated dashes on the half hour at 750 but at that time it was typical to talk about radio waves using their wavelength so the expert had meant 750 m or 400 khz but airheart made a terrible mistake relaying this plan to the atasa she requested the signal be sent on 7500 khz instead of 750 m or 400 khz but she did explicitly say if frequencies mentioned unsuitable inform me but no one ever corrected her at 7:42 a.m. air heart's voice came through so loud men even went above deck to see if they could hear a motor or spot the plane she said we must be on you but cannot see you but gas is running low been unable to reach you by radio we are flying at 1,000 ft on Howland the highfrequency radio direction finder was so low on battery the radio man didn't even hear air heart's message much less take a bearing on it 10 minutes later Airhart said we are circling but cannot hear you go ahead on 7500 the atasa immediately sent A's on 7500 khz in the Electra airheart heard the stutter stop of A's filling the cabin the relief of finally hearing something must have been overwhelming she quickly turned her radio Direction finding Loop to locate the null but the signal never dropped out out the frequency was too high so the radio waves from the atasa were reflecting and arriving from different directions Joseph gurr a radio mechanic who worked on air heart's plane later said that they knew there were limitations to high frequencies which had a tendency to skip and bend creating a false radio Direction bearing without a minimum she was still lost aart frantically called atasa we received your signals but unable able to get a minimum please take a bearing on us and answer with voice itasa attempted to explain the problem your signals received okay it is Impractical to take a bearing on your voice no response without the belly antenna she probably never heard any of their Communications and it wouldn't have mattered if the ataska had sent low frequency signals because air heart's Loop was tuned to pick up 7500 khz so why didn't the atasa correct the frequency she suggested Commander Thompson of the atasa was aware of her radio Direction finding limits he had received messages both from ahart's husband George putam and the Coast Guard's San Francisco division stating aart could only take bearings on frequencies between 200 and 1500 khz but he either thought airheart knew more about her radio equipment or that it wasn't his place to make suggestions and take more responsibility for her flight when she asked the ataska to tell her if these frequencies weren't suitable she could have been referring to the ship's capabilities rather than her own the atasa said they'd be ready on the frequency she wanted and more instead of giving specific suggestions San Francisco's Coast Car division tried to get Commander Thompson to take more responsibility for air heart's radio communications by suggesting they directly tell airheart which frequencies to use but Thompson essentially told them to butt out the atasa communicated directly with airheart from then on the Radioman continued to try to reach aart and just before 9:00 a.m. ahart's voice suddenly burst through again we are on the line 157 337 we will repeat this on 6210 khz we are running online North and South her voice was desperate it sounded as if she was about to burst into tears or scream this was the last message the itasa heard there are a number of conspiracy theories about what happened to aart after that but the evidence seems clear she ran out of fuel Somewhere over the Pacific and crashed into the sea 2 hours after her last message the atasa left Howland to search north and west for the Electra other Navy and Coast Guard ships and planes joined the search for over 2 weeks to that point in US history it was the most intensive and expensive search and rescue operation costing around $4 million which is almost 100 million in today's money no one has ever found a trace of Nunan aart or her Electra all of these mistakes could have been resolved if Airhart had two-way communication but her belly antenna somehow malfunctioned some theories suggest it fell off during takeoff in New Guinea but but without physical evidence it's impossible to say but airheart did confirm receiving signals on her loop antenna her Loop could only Direction finded with lower frequencies but it could receive signals on a wide range if she had switched to using the loop for all Communications she could have received itasca's voice messages and then the itasa could have requested she'd take a bearing on a lower frequency which would have guided her safely to Howland [Music] Island when I began researching this video I expected to find that Amelia aarts demise was inevitable that what she was trying to do was just so difficult that nothing could have saved her but instead I found the opposite there were at least a half dozen things that if they went differently would have allowed her to land safely so to me this story comes down to two things knowledge and responsibility aart lacked knowledge of radio systems which would have allowed her to specify the right direction finding frequency but Commander Thompson of the atasa had that knowledge he knew her Direction finding limits but he didn't take on the responsibility to correct her when attempting any challenging Endeavor you need someone with the right knowledge who will also take responsibility for getting things right that's what you need to battle the inherent chaos and disorder of the universe otherwise what you get is disaster this video 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