
I have been watching a series of lectures on AGW and the section on contrails caught my attention. You are the obvious person to ask about them so here we go.
What is the highest practical cruising altitude for the commercial passenger jets you are rated to fly? Cargo jets too if any are applicable.
Is it true that Contrails rarely form above flight level 390 and are very rare above 450?
If not what level does the formation of contrails start to fall off at and what aircraft can cruise at those levels?
I know that when a jet takes off at max weight it has a hard time reaching a high flight level, but I am given to understand that within two hours enough fuel is consumed to remove this limit. Is that a good rule of thumb or am I misunderstanding something about the physics of flight?
How much extra fuel does a commercial aircraft burn at say FL430 vs FL 350?
Other questions will depend on the answers to these so I will eagerly await your answers.

..contrails are a normal atmospheric phenomenon produced by the combustion of jet fuel and air at high altitudes in the correct temperature/ moisture combinations.









