——s WR=1.cxroor) Loess Project 11.2 - Sampling - H. F. Plank P, F. Moore EQUIPMENT a Seven aircraft equipped for cloud sampling as described in the Report were used on this mission: "A" flight, Tiger White I (F-84); "B" flight, Tiger White II (F-84); "C" flight, Tiger Blue I and II (2-F-€4's); "D" flight, Tiger Yellow I and II (2-F-84's); and Cassidy II (B-57) the control aircraft. WEATHER The wind pattern was in general suitable for sampling, with winds blowing uy from the East at velocities up to 17 knots at expected sampling altitudes but with very little change in direction or velocity, i.e., a favorable wind shear. As zero time approached, Cassidy II observed a large cumlus cloud structure running up to about 32,000 feet sitting over ground zero, which could have com pletely obscured the bomb cloud for sampling purposes, The 10 minute delay in shot time allowed a big hole in the cloud system to move over ground zero and the bomb cloud went into this hole and remained visible throughout the sampling operation. CLOUD DESCRIPTION The bomb cloud rose in an anvil headed column to about 32,000 feet (10,000 feet higher than the prediction) and spread out into the hole in the natural cloud structure. The top of the bomb cloud penetrated into a solid overcast at 31,000 feet and the bottom of the bomb cloud emerged from the top of another overcast at 15,000 feet. Big cumulus columns were ranked about, joining the undercast and the overcast and forming a larged closed amphitheatre within which aircraft could fly and still easily see the bomb cloud standing in the middle. C L4 MV ke OE - 2 = al A

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