(engines whirring)
- Singapore to Newark,
Auckland to Doha, Perth to London,
the three longest flights
in the world, for now.
I'm here at New York's JFK Airport
about to board a nonstop
flight to Sydney, Australia.
It's one of three research
flights being run by Qantas.
The others will be from London to Sydney
and a second from New York to Sydney.
This is really groundbreaking.
Biological studies on passengers and crew
haven't really been done
like this ever before.
They're testing passengers and pilots
with the aim of learning
more about alertness
on ultra-long flights as well
as wellbeing and jet lag.
To do that, 49 people,
made up of Qantas crew,
a small media contingent,
and six game Frequent Flyers
will take the nearly
19-and-a-half-hour journey
and be tested in-route.
(pleasant orchestral music)
So, Marie, tell us exactly
what you'll be monitoring on the flight
with the six passengers
that you'll be tracking.
- They're monitoring their sleep,
their mood or state of
mind, and what they eat.
As soon as they get on the plane,
we're trying to get them
to live Sydney time.
What they'll notice in the cabin
is a very different schedule
from what most long-distance
schedules in the cabin are.
Normally, you get on, you get a big meal,
and then the lights go out.
This time, it's gonna be all-go.
Lights will stay on for about six hours.
Our passengers will be
asked to do exercise
and do their logging and everything,
but the most important
thing is to stay awake
during the six hours of light.
- So what do you hope to get out of this?
What do you want to accomplish?
- Ultimately, we hope for
personalized jet lag solutions.
What we'd like to be able to say
is you're going to Rome, Italy.
Here's the schedule of
what you should be doing
as soon as you get onboard,
but in the medium-term
or the shorter-term,
we're just trying to enhance the wellbeing
of passengers' health
and comfort in the air
on these probably increasingly-frequent
long-haul flights that people will do.
- At the end of the
day, Qantas is weighing
whether to make this route
a commercial reality.
The final decision, which
depends on aircraft economics,
regulatory approvals,
and labor agreements,
is expected by the end of the year.
So, Alan, tell us why you wanna do this.
Is there significant demand
for New York to Sydney nonstop,
London to Sydney nonstop?
Is there enough traffic
to support a daily,
regular nonstop flight?
- We believe there is, and actually,
one of the advantages
of putting on a nonstop
is you also stimulate the market,
so actually today, we
have a flight that flies
from L.A. to New York
every day, and we fill it,
and they're only traffic
coming from Australia,
so we know if we put a direct flight
from Sydney into New York,
Melbourne into New York,
we'll absolutely fill it.
Between Melbourne and Sydney and London,
there's more than enough
for daily service each day.
The question has always been
can you do it economically.
- Enjoy your flight.
(group chattering)
- Thank you.
- You're welcome.
(pleasant electronic music)
(group chattering)
- And here we go!
(engines rumbling)
19 hours nonstop, New York to Sydney.
(pleasant electronic music)
Two teams are leading
the in-flight research.
Professor Carroll is
running passenger studies
by personalizing the flight experience,
allocated times for activities.
- Five.
Not very hard, really easy.
- [Scott] Reaction time
tests, and meal design.
(pleasant electronic music)
Meanwhile, a separate team
is studying pilot alertness
with cockpit cameras and EEG monitors,
and they'll be measuring
melatonin levels in urine samples
to determine body clock patterns.
- [Pilot] 19 hours and five minutes later,
we should be touching down in Sydney.
- I've set my watch ahead to Sydney time,
12:47 tomorrow.
First course, spicy
tomato and saffron soup.
The idea is to both keep you
hydrated and keep you awake.
(engine humming)
(muffled group chattering)
And the lights in the cabin
go dark to encourage sleep.
It's 3:30 in the morning, Sydney time.
We've still got four hours to go.
Most everyone on the
plane is still asleep.
I've in-and-out sleeping.
It has been dark outside
the entire flight.
It's as if we're chasing darkness.
(pleasant electronic music)
We have a little bit more
than two hours to go,
and we've finally found the sunrise.
(pleasant electronic music)
- [Pilot] Welcome to Australia.
The local time here in Sydney is 7:43 a.m.
(engine humming)
(pleasant electronic music)
(group chattering)
- So here I am at Sydney Airport
after more than 19 hours
nonstop from New York,
and I feel surprisingly great,
and it really does surprise me,
because I usually don't
sleep well on airplanes,
but this was a different thing
and a different thing
for many of the travelers
who took part in the test.
This was not just about passengers
doing the Macarena in
aisles of the airplane.
There was serious
research that was going on
that's going to impact
the future of air travel.
We're all gonna be on flights
that are longer and longer,
and there are real health
concerns with that.
The research that Qantas is doing
will go a long way to improve
travels around the world.
(pleasant orchestral music)
