VI
Center's canisters during the mission,

On 6 April 1955, the B-36 airplane again took off from Indian Springs

Air Force Base and started climbing to 48,000 feet altitude -- the mean
relative density ratio being below 1,06,

As usual, one engine went out

and the bombing crew announced the altitude change to 46,000 feet,

The

high altitude detonation went off with an orange-white metallic flash,

reported to be brighter than the sun,

The usual mushroom cloud was

missing; instead, a hugh billowy circle, as if a giant had blown a gigantic
smoke ring,

Within a very short time the cloud thinned out and became

invisible as the 926th TestSquadron (Sampling) pilots could testify
because of their difficulty in collecting samples,

In spite of some

difficulty climbing high enough, L926th pilots who sampled the cloud,
were successful, especially, those who sampled long after the shot,

On 21 December 195k, Air Force headquarters asked that airplanes
obtain samples from the high altitude nuclear shots ". , . at an approximate

range of 2,000 nautical miles east of the NPG [Nevada Proving Ground/ at

an altitude of 40,000 feet"? The 926th Test Squadron sent two F-8)G
samplers, with one C-47 for support, to Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland,
because weather conditions indicated that the nuclear cloud would drift
east, passing over Nashville and Knoxville, Tennessee, Raleigh, North
Carolina, and would go out to sea somewhere between Norfolk, Virginia, and
Myrtle Beach, SouthCarolina,”
The two F-8)G samplers flew six sorties while accomplishing the
long-range sampling mission,

One of the airplanes flew at 10,000 feet

altitude and the other flew at 15,000 feet altitude.

13h
AFWL/HO

The samples

SWEH-2-003)
‘5?

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