Imagine flying toward a runway on a moonless night. No city lights below. No horizon ahead. Just a rectangle of white and amber lights floating in absolute darkness. Your eyes tell you you’re high — comfortably, safely high. Your altimeter disagrees. By the time you realise your eyes are lying, the trees are already filling the windscreen.
This is the black hole approach. It’s one of aviation’s most insidious killers, and it has been crashing perfectly good aircraft for as long as pilots have been landing at night. The physics are simple. The psychology is devastating. And it catches experienced pilots just as easily as students.
A recent Boldmethod analysis broke down the mechanics of this illusion and the accidents it continues to cause. The pattern is almost always the same: a visual approach on a dark night, over water or unlit terrain, to a lighted runway with no surrounding ground features. The pilot flies a normal-looking approach. The approach is not normal. The aircraft descends into terrain short of the runway.
How the Illusion Works
During the day, your brain uses dozens of visual cues to judge height and distance — the size of buildings, the texture of fields, the movement of terrain in your peripheral vision (what scientists call “optic flow”). At night, over featureless terrain, every single one of those cues vanishes. All you have left is the runway lighting.
And runway lights are liars. Without a horizon or ground texture for scale, your brain interprets the geometry of those lights as if you were higher than you are. The runway looks small and far away. You instinctively lower the nose to “get down to it.” The PAPI lights — if you’re checking them — are screaming red. But you’re not checking them, because your eyes are locked on the runway, and your eyes are telling you everything is fine.
“Without optic flow — the relative movement of terrain in our peripheral vision — it is virtually impossible to judge height above the ground.” — SKYbrary Aviation Safety
The technical name is Controlled Flight Into Terrain — CFIT. The aircraft is flyable. The engines are running. The controls work. But the pilot, trusting visual perception over instruments, flies a perfectly controlled aircraft into the ground. It remains one of the leading causes of fatal accidents in general aviation worldwide.
When It Gets Worse
Certain conditions amplify the illusion. Rain on the windscreen scatters the runway lights and makes distance estimation even harder. A wide runway can make you think you’re closer (and lower) than you are. A narrow or upsloping runway does the opposite — it makes you feel high, encouraging a dangerously low approach. Coastal airports surrounded by water on the approach path are classic black-hole traps.
Fatigue makes everything worse. On a long night flight, the natural tendency is to relax on final — you can see the runway, you’re almost home. That’s precisely when the scan discipline breaks down and the illusion takes hold. Experienced pilots are not immune. In some cases, their confidence makes them more vulnerable, because they trust their instincts in situations where instinct is exactly what’s going to get them killed.
The FAA’s accident database is full of these events. The pattern repeats across decades: VFR night approach, featureless terrain, CFIT short of the runway. Different aircraft, different airports, different pilots. Same illusion.
How to Beat It
The fix is not complicated. It just requires discipline — and a willingness to distrust your own eyes.
First: use the VASI or PAPI. These visual glide slope indicators exist precisely for this situation. Two red, two white means you’re on the correct three-degree path. All red means you’re dangerously low. If the airport has them — and most do — they should be your primary reference on any night visual approach, not the runway lights themselves.
Second: cross-check your instruments. Even on a visual approach, your altimeter, vertical speed indicator, and GPS glide path (if available) are telling you the truth. A quick scan every few seconds is enough to catch the illusion before it catches you. If your instruments say you’re descending at 1,000 feet per minute and you meant to be at 500 — trust the instruments.
Third: if you lose sight of the airport lights at any point during a night approach, go around. Immediately. Don’t hunt for them. Don’t descend to “find” the field. Power up, pitch up, climb, and try again. A go-around costs you five minutes. Hitting terrain costs you everything.
Night flying is one of aviation’s great pleasures — the smooth air, the quiet radio, the rivers of light below. But the black hole approach is a reminder that darkness doesn’t just hide the terrain. It hides the truth about where you are. The pilots who survive are the ones who never stop asking their instruments to confirm what their eyes are telling them.
Sources: Boldmethod, SKYbrary Aviation Safety, FAA Safety Briefing, California Aeronautical University




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