Did the Titanic sink because freak weather event caused optical illusion that HID giant iceberg? New theory says 'thermal inversion' prevented crew from seeing the danger

It was a clear, starry sky above the Titanic as it struck an iceberg in the night of April 14, 1912.

Passengers who survived the tragedy told of a beautiful, cloudless night, with some even claiming they spent their final moments on deck before boarding a lifeboat discussing the brightness of the stars.

Crew on night watch on a 90ft-high vantage point faced the same sky above them, but when they looked to the horizon, it was obscured by an optical illusion.

The haze lingering over the calm, icy waters hid the massive iceberg which sealed the Titanic’s fate and sunk the ‘unsinkable’ ship in the early hours of April 15, 1912.

A freak weather event created the phenomenon, which possibly both obscured the iceberg until it was too late and hindered communication with a nearby ship, according to a new theory.

did the titanic sink because freak weather event caused optical illusion that hid giant iceberg? new theory says 'thermal inversion' prevented crew from seeing the danger

It was a clear, starry sky above the Titanic as it struck an iceberg in the night of April 14, 1912 (pictured: the actual iceberg which sank the ship, photographed from nearby German ship Prinz Adalbert)

did the titanic sink because freak weather event caused optical illusion that hid giant iceberg? new theory says 'thermal inversion' prevented crew from seeing the danger

Photograph of Titanic leaving Southampton at the start of her maiden voyage on April 10, 1912. Five days after this photo was taken the ship was on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean

Historian and broadcaster Tim Maltin claims the Titanic’s crew fell victim to a thermal inversion, which is caused by a band of cold air forcing itself underneath a band of warmer air, the Times reports.

He believes that the cold current in the North Atlantic Ocean called Labrador pushed this cold air beneath the warm Gulf Stream, creating a mirage.

The light rays are bent downwards, which creates the illusion that the horizon is higher than it actually is.

The scattered light also creates a haze lingering over the water, which Maltin believes likely hid the iceberg behind it in the moonless night.

Those on the vantage point, the crow’s nest of the ship, likely will have only seen the gap between true horizon and the refracted one as a haze.

This ‘haze’ was later described by surviving crew members as well as other ships in the area at the time.

The survivor and rescuer reports clearly indicate a thermal inversion being present that night, according to Maltin, author of Titanic: A Very Deceiving Night.

Lookouts later said the iceberg had looked dark as the haze blurred its lines and made it difficult to set apart from the sea.

‘The reason why the berg appeared to be dark was because they were seeing it against a lighter haze,’ Maltin told the Times.

did the titanic sink because freak weather event caused optical illusion that hid giant iceberg? new theory says 'thermal inversion' prevented crew from seeing the danger

James Moody was on night watch when the collision happened and took the call from the watchman, asking him ‘What do you see?’ The man responded: ‘Iceberg, dead ahead.’

By 2.20am, with hundreds of people still on board, the ship plunged beneath the waves, taking more than 1,500, including Moody, with it.

Among the nearby ships which might have been able to help save some of the 2,240 passengers and crew was the SS Californian, which failed to communicate with the Titanic and spot that it was sinking because of the haze.

Due to the false horizon, crewmembers on the SS Californian thought they were looking at a much smaller ship that was closer to them, Maltin theorised.

READ MORE: Titanic’s biggest mysteries: The five key unanswered questions about the ill-fated liner – including why it was going so fast and the circumstances around the captain’s death 

They thought as a small vessel, the other ship would not be equipped with a wireless operator, and therefore concluded the best way to communicate with the Titanic would be via a powerful morse lamp.

This was briefly spotted by those on the Titanic, as Colonel Archibald Gracie, who survived the tragedy, later said.

He told how he pointed out a ‘bright white light’ to other passengers, which he believed to come from a ship ‘about five miles off’.

‘But instead of growing brighter [when I leaned over the rail of the ship], we men saw the light fade and then pass altogether,’ Colonel Gracie was quoted as saying in the book ‘Titanic: A Survivor’s Story by Colonel Archibald Gracie’ by Deborah Collcutt.

The morse code sent from the SS Californian to the Titanic and back was distorted by the haze and therefore they couldn’t effectively communicate, Maltin argues.

‘I’ve spent years wondering why these two ships which were trying to Morse each other all night couldn’t communicate,’ Maltin previously said.

‘A phenomenon known as scintillation scrambled Titanic’s Morse lamp signals and it meant that the nearby ship, instead of realising it was the Titanic and coming straight to her aid, never came to her aid.’

Scintillation is the same effect that makes stars appear to twinkle as the light is distorted when it passes through the Earth’s atmosphere.

did the titanic sink because freak weather event caused optical illusion that hid giant iceberg? new theory says 'thermal inversion' prevented crew from seeing the danger

RMS Titanic departing Southampton on April 10, 1912. She would never return from this maiden voyage. Her remains now lie on the seafloor about 350 nautical miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada

did the titanic sink because freak weather event caused optical illusion that hid giant iceberg? new theory says 'thermal inversion' prevented crew from seeing the danger

Lifeboats row away from the still lighted ship on April 15, 1912, as depicted in this British newspaper sketch

Equally contorted were the Titanic’s distress rockets, which the SS Californian only spotted around sunrise. While they were visible, the rockets did not appear to be distress signals.

Maltin’s theory is supported by Dr Andrew Young, who is an expert in atmospheric refraction at San Diego State University.

He also told the Times that there was ‘a strong superior-mirage display in the ice field where the Titanic sank’.

Dr Young added that the freak weather phenomenon ‘contributed to the confusion at the time of the accident.’

Despite repeated distress calls being sent out by the Titanic and flares launched from the decks, the first rescue ship, the RMS Carpathia, only arrived nearly two hours after the ship sank, pulling more than 700 people from the water.

It was not until 1985 that the wreck of the ship was discovered in two pieces on the ocean floor.

Read more

OTHER NEWS

10 minutes ago

2 cheap ASX 200 shares I'd buy in May

10 minutes ago

Virgil van Dijk will not lose focus at Liverpool despite nearing end of contract

10 minutes ago

Infected blood scandal - latest: Report into worst NHS disaster could lead to prosecutions, says minister

10 minutes ago

Final moment of Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi before helicopter crash

10 minutes ago

Jokic gives a new lesson after being eliminated against Minnesota: The best team won

10 minutes ago

Dali being refloated weeks after collapse of Key Bridge, a milestone in reopening access to the Port of Baltimore. Here's what happens next

10 minutes ago

'Possessed' nun's 17th-century 'letter from the devil' has finally been deciphered

10 minutes ago

Fact check: New Yorker article about Lucy Letby is not available in the UK for legal reasons

10 minutes ago

DWP forcing 134,000 people to repay £250million in overpaid benefits

10 minutes ago

Down 13%, is BP’s share price one of the best bargains in the FTSE 100?

12 minutes ago

ICC chief prosecutor says he is seeking arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister and Hamas leaders, among others

12 minutes ago

Independent UN experts urge Yemen’s Houthis to free detained Baha'i followers

12 minutes ago

What a blast to work at NASA. Space agency is sky-high again in latest survey of federal employees

13 minutes ago

For $60, you can get a Costco 1-Year Gold Star Membership and a $20 Digital Costco Shop Card*

13 minutes ago

Part of downtown Houston now an 'exclusion zone' because of extent of damage from Thursday's storms

14 minutes ago

Music legend Frank Ifield dies as tributes paid to iconic singer who was household name in UK

14 minutes ago

‘No sign of life’ at crash site of helicopter carrying Iran’s president, state TV says

14 minutes ago

Anthony Edwards brags about his Game 7 defense on Jamal Murray: "I had Jamal in handcuffs"

14 minutes ago

Rape centre boss was behind 'heresy hunt' of female employee with 'gender critical' beliefs, tribunal rules

15 minutes ago

DWP finds 63,000 benefit claimants breaking rules in bank account monitoring trial

15 minutes ago

The Constitutional Court rules Zuma cannot have a seat in Parliament

15 minutes ago

Kerry Katona admits she feels 'unsupported' by fiancé Ryan Mahoney after undergoing a nose job as she moves in with her mother Sue

15 minutes ago

STI ends almost flat as market faces reality check

15 minutes ago

Local shire takes legal action against pensioner living in a bus on land he owns

15 minutes ago

Troye Sivan wants to work with Ariana Grande again and again

15 minutes ago

Hard-Fi make comeback with new single Don't Go Making Plans and announce EP and tour

15 minutes ago

People could have gender transition signed off by single GP under Labour plans

15 minutes ago

Protesters block New Caledonia roads as French police pour in

15 minutes ago

Ohio State heavy favorites for four-star RB, add multiple official visits in June

15 minutes ago

No inquest held into death of Radio 2 broadcaster Steve Wright

17 minutes ago

Crews work to refloat and move ship that caused deadly Baltimore bridge collapse

19 minutes ago

Fresh heartache for cancer-stricken King Charles: How monarch will be feeling renewed 'agony, disbelief and wretched numbness' after former IRA commander confesses to murdering his beloved great-uncle Dickie

19 minutes ago

Emma Lovell stabbing death: Lee Lovell opens up about wife's death at their North Lakes home and the two words that changed family's lives forever

19 minutes ago

I was 'brokefished' by my friend for £400 - can I salvage our relationship? Money psychotherapist VICKY REYNAL replies

20 minutes ago

Think like a fund manager and back FTSE 250 bargains - the shares experts are picking

20 minutes ago

I was 'brokefished' by my friend for £400 - can I salvage our relationship? Money psychotherapist VICKY REYNAL replies

20 minutes ago

Burglar hurled stolen mobile phones at police from the top of 60ft high roof during nine-hour standoff that brought town centre to a standstill, court hears

20 minutes ago

Britain's 30 most desirable villages: From the millionaires' haven deep in Leicestershire to the most expensive street in Wales. Property experts take their pick. So does yours make the list?

20 minutes ago

Urgent warning to Britons over an impending invasion of Asian hornets: Experts warn the UK will be hit with record numbers this summer - here's how to spot the terrifying pest

21 minutes ago

Ensure The Longevity Of Your Ryobi Tool Batteries With These Simple Tips

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch