By Ray Johnson, Air Force Flight Test Center Public Affairs

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AFPN) — There are many places from which scientists can analyze cloud
moisture. For example, take tropical islands and their reliable afternoon showers. Or perhaps more
conveniently, there’s every outdoor Starbucks cafe in Seattle.

But for some researchers, the ideal spot is Edwards.

Why here in the Mojave Desert, which receives less than five inches of rain annually? The answer: 452nd Flight
Test Squadron-owned aircraft that can transport scientists and data-gathering equipment above diverse
terrain and through various climate conditions found along the West Coast.

“We periodically stage out of Edwards for our studies because a 452nd aircrew can take us over the
desert, along the ocean and around
mountainous and flat areas during a typical flight,” said Dave Johnson, project coordinator with Space
Dynamics Laboratory at Utah State University.

Plus, he said, the base is perfect for research flight because “you don’t have to worry about missions being
canceled due to bad weather.”

SDL is a recognized leader in designing and testing radiometers and other electro-optical sensors. Its
experience includes developing and flying infrared instruments aboard aircraft laboratories, sounding
rockets, space shuttle payloads and satellites. Overall, SDL’s mission is researching remote-sensing and
measurement systems.

For the latter, it teamed up here with the Russian Vavilov State Optical Institute to assess cloud structures
while using modified NKC-135E tankers called Flight Infrared Signature Technology Aircraft.

Vavilov, located in St. Petersburg, studies fields such as photo physics, thermal vision technology, aerospace
optics and laser ranging. Johnson labeled it the “premier” remote-sensing institute in Russia.

During the recent two-week studies here, members from Vavilov, SDL and the Air Force Research
Laboratory at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., flew six missions aboard FISTA, collecting data with eight
devices, including a Russian aquameter.

This infrared apparatus, which is sensitive to water content in clouds, gathered information for scientists to
study atmosphere spectro- brightness.

“This process helps us to finitely gauge temperatures and moisture content at various altitudes,” said Dr.
Valentin Solovyev, chief of Vavilov’s thermal imaging system section.

These airborne studies from Edwards are part of a collaborative
technology development program called the Russian-American
Observational Satellites, Johnson said. Sponsored by the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization, RAMOS is a
long-term data collection and analysis effort that, in final form, may feature two remote
sensing satellites — one Russian, one U.S. They will provide
measurement data, often acquired simultaneously, to analysts in
both countries.

RAMOS is divided into two phases. Phase One, called Near-Term
Experiments, is a series of studies and pathfinder testing using existing assets, such as the 452nd’s FISTA.

“Hopefully, Phase One’s end result will be the deployment and operation of the satellites for stereo-optical
imaging (Phase Two), which would address shared concerns in surveillance and environmental monitoring,”
said Dmitry Chvanov, a Russian representative with SDL.

Two satellites in near identical orbits would provide a three-dimensional image, which Johnson believes will
provide scientists early views of natural phenomena such as hurricanes, cyclones and tsunamis. It also could
provide more information of existing weather.

“For example,” Johnson explained, “it would be nice to know the wind speeds inside a hurricane without
having to fly through it and then be able predict its path and the velocity of its destructive power.”

Furthermore, Johnson and Chanov said there is some “military applicability,” such as spotting rocket plumes
and then determining the point, time, speed and direction of a launch — even through thick cloud cover.

Additionally, the two researchers said research instruments flown aboard aircraft here could provide the
scientific foundation for other devices that will eventually be developed for RAMOS.