Chemtrails at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International (FLL)

Fort Lauderdale, United States · 26.07°N, 80.15°W · Last updated: Mon, 20 Apr 2026 14:15:13 GMT

Current Contrail Conditions

None Likelihood0/8 levels favorable

0 of 8 atmospheric pressure levels currently show conditions favorable for contrail formation.

Solar visibility: Good · Sun elevation: 44.4°

Atmospheric Conditions by Pressure Level

ChemTracker monitors 8 pressure levels above Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International. Contrails form when temperature is below the Schmidt-Appleman threshold and relative humidity with respect to ice (RH-ice) exceeds 70%.

PressureAltitudeTemp (°C)RH-water (%)RH-ice (%)Contrail
150 hPa44,327 ft-63611Unlikely
200 hPa38,637 ft-541017Unlikely
225 hPa36,216 ft-523862Unlikely
250 hPa34,004 ft-474469Unlikely
275 hPa31,965 ft-41.54669Unlikely
300 hPa30,070 ft-375072Unlikely
350 hPa26,636 ft-282229Unlikely
400 hPa23,578 ft-21.34049Unlikely

Solar Visibility Over Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International

Visibility RatingGood
Sun Elevation44.4°
Visibility Factor70%

Solar visibility determines how well contrails can be observed from the ground. Higher sun elevation means better backlit visibility of trail formation above Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are there chemtrails at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International today?

ChemTracker monitors real-time atmospheric conditions above Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International (FLL) to predict contrail formation. Currently, 0 of 8 pressure levels show conditions favorable for contrail formation — indicating none likelihood of persistent trails above this airport.

Why do planes at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International leave trails?

Aircraft departing or overflying Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International (FLL) produce contrails when hot, humid jet exhaust mixes with cold ambient air at cruising altitude. This forms ice crystals that become visible as white trails. Contrails persist when the surrounding air is supersaturated with respect to ice (RH-ice above 100%), which can cause them to spread into cirrus-like haze lasting hours.

How does ChemTracker monitor aircraft at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International?

ChemTracker uses live ADS-B transponder data to track every aircraft in the airspace around Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International (FLL) in real time. Each aircraft's altitude is cross-referenced against atmospheric data from Open-Meteo at 8 pressure levels. The app shows flight numbers, current altitudes, and whether atmospheric conditions at each level are favorable for contrail formation.

What atmospheric conditions cause contrails at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International?

Contrails form above Fort Lauderdale when air temperature drops below approximately −40°C at cruising altitude (typically 8,000–12,000 metres). The Schmidt-Appleman criterion calculates the precise threshold based on ambient pressure, relative humidity, and engine efficiency. When relative humidity with respect to ice exceeds 100%, contrails persist and spread. ChemTracker checks all 8 pressure levels above Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International for these conditions every 30 minutes.

Nearby Airports & Related Pages

Track Aircraft at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International in Real Time

See every aircraft above Fort Lauderdale with its altitude, flight number, and whether atmospheric conditions at that pressure level are favorable for trail formation.

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