tained by F-84 and B~36 aircraft penetrating the cloud

to produce 4 response tu rate of change of pressure
down to very-low frequencies. ° sitivity was ap-

proximately 50 mm/(dyne/cm*®)

Angus recorder operating at 0.7
The AFCRC operated modiffe
developed by NEL

from each detonation.

an Esterline-

Air Weather Service WB-29

aircraft equipped with particulate and gas-sumpling

n/min.
T-21~B equipment

devices collected samples at remcte distances from

the nuclear detonation
Five F-84G aircraft utilized the method of snap
gas-sampling. This consisted of an exterior stainless -

Tape speeds and sensitivities

were approximately the same as those used by NEL.
The Air Weather Service (AWS) operated crossed-

steel probe in the nose of the aircraft that fed into a

deflated polyethelene bag. Sampl«s were taken by
activating a valve andfilling the ; olyethelene bag by
ram pressure.

loop goniometers at distant stations to record azi-

rnuths. These were similar to their standard sferics
low-frequency (10-kc) narrow-band (about 0.5-kc)

direction-finding stations used for locating thunder-

Ten F-84G aircraft were cq..ipped with a dual elec-

trical compressor system feeding into two 500-in®

stormareas as an aid to weather forecasting. The
ag
operational stations had a slightly wider

compression cylinders (3,000 psi). All of the air
sampled was bled from an intermediate stage of the

bandwidth (8 to 12 ke).

Distant stations for the most part utilized locafions
aready in use by NBS, DRL, AWS, or A

axial compressor of the aircraft and fed into the dual
compressors—-the squeegee method.

Operation

Castle provided the first full-scale operational test
of this system. In addition, several B-36 aircraft
were equipped with the squeegee system; for these,

lusofar as possible, sites were chosen on east-west
anc norta-souti orientations in an attempt to get
some idea of differences due to a daylight path, a
uark path, and auroral-zone transmission.
Some distant stations were located in proximity to

the intake air was bled from the upstream side of the

large cabin pressurization filter and fed through com-

stations transmitting low-frequency carriers. In
order to avoid interfe rence from these stations, their
cooperaticn was enlisted and they were shut down at ~

pressors into 900-in’ (3,900 psi) cylinders.

critical times.

samples and a B-31 gas-sampling device for gaseous
debris.

Project 7.2

9

Longer-range samples were obtained using WB-29
aircraft with associated C-1 foils for particulate

“Detection of Airborne Low-Frequency

The collection of all close~in particulate samples
was under the technical direction of the Los Alamos

Sounafrom Nuclear Explosions” (WT-931), A
G. 8B Otmsted, Project Otficer.

Scientific Laboratory (LASL); the collection of gas
samples was supervised by AFOAT-1. The Umversity

Measurements of tie airborne low-frequency sound

from the Castle detonations were made at fifteen re-

of California Radiation Laboratory (UCRL) was responsible for gay separation and analyses of some
samples at the test site.

mcte locations at a variety of distances and directions
from the Eniwetok Proving Ground to study the relathon between signal characteristics and the energy

Instrumentation, techniques, and procedures in
the processing, separation, and assay of the nuclear

released over a range of yields up to 15 Mt.

Both standard and very-low-frequency sound-

particulate and gaseous debris are included in detailed
LASL and UCRL reports.
Close-in gas samples were collected at altitudes

recording equipment responsive to smal! atmospheric pres-ure variations in the frequency range from

9.0uz to 1 eps were employed

in the range of 35,000 to 50,000 feet MSL.

Project 7.4 “Calibration Analysis ofClase -in
Atomic Device Debris” (WT-932), AFi
: D. L.
Northrop, Project Officer.

Gaseous

debris sample sizes collected varied from 107'* to

107"? bomb fructions. Representative sections of

each test cloud were sampled, but due to extreme

The work of this project was a continuation of a

oregram cstablished to monitor all U. S. nuclear

cloud heights obtained on high-yield detonations, only
tbe lower portions of these clouds were sampled.

detonations, in order to determine calibration reference points for the analysis of airborne nuclear

Long-range samples were collected from approximately sea level to 20,000 feet.

debris.

These data were obtained by the application

of chemical, radiochemical, physical, and nuclear
analyses to the debris collected by specialized sampling devices. The calibration daca were further ©x-

PROGRAM 9: TECHNICAL PHOTOGRAPHY

tonded by making similar measurements on nuclear

Project 9.1 “Cloud Photography” (WT-933),

debris collected at great distances from the detona-

Edgerton, Germeshausen and Grier, Inc., Jack G.
James, Lt Col, USAF, Project Officer.

tion
Nucltear-debris samples close-in to the detonation

were obtained utilizing sampling devices on F-84,
WB-29, and B-26 aircraft. Similarly equipped WB-29
aircraft operated out of Hawaii for the long-range
calibration samples.
Close~in particulate and gaseous samples were ob-

117

Project 9.1 was established for the purpose of recording photographically cloud formation phenomena
that would satisfactorily supply data for use in studying the aircraft delivery problem and correlation of
fallout studies in relation to cloud drift. The technical aerial photography was conducted by Lookout

Select target paragraph3