NASA Responds to California Wildfire Emergency Imaging Request

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July 11, 2008

Steve Cole
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0918
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx

Beth Hagenauer
Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif.
661-276-7960
beth.hagenauer@xxxxxxxx

Mike Mewhinney
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
650-604-3937
michael.s.mewhinney@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-172

NASA RESPONDS TO CALIFORNIA WILDFIRE EMERGENCY IMAGING REQUEST

WASHINGTON -- A remotely piloted aircraft carrying a NASA sensor flew 
over much of California earlier this week, gathering information that 
will be used to help fight more than 300 wildfires burning within the 
state. Additional flights are planned for next week. 

The flights by NASA's unmanned Ikhana aircraft are using a 
sophisticated Autonomous Modular Scanner developed at NASA's Ames 
Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif. The flights are originating 
from NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, 
Calif. Ikhana's onboard sensor can detect temperature differences 
from less than one-half degree to approximately 1,000 degrees 
Fahrenheit. The scanner operates like a digital camera with 
specialized filters to detect light energy at visible, infrared and 
thermal wavelengths.

NASA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service have 
partnered to obtain imagery of the wildfires in response to requests 
from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, the 
California Governor's Office of Emergency Services and the National 
Interagency Fire Center.

"NASA's emergency imaging gives us immediate information that we can 
use to manage fires, identify threats and deploy firefighting 
assets," California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said. "I thank NASA 
for providing us with this important firefighting tool that will help 
us maximize attacks on the more than 300 active fires currently 
burning in California."

The Ikhana aircraft is imaging almost 4,000 square miles from Santa 
Barbara north to the Oregon border. The flights provide critical 
information about the location, size and terrain around the fires to 
commanders in the field in as little as 10 minutes. The first mission 
on July 8 flew over 10 individual and complex fires along a route 
over the Sierra Nevada Mountains, west to the Cub Complex fire and 
south to the Gap Fire in Santa Barbara County. 

Fire images are collected onboard Ikhana and transmitted through a 
communications satellite to NASA Ames. There, the imagery is 
superimposed over Google Earth and Microsoft Virtual Earth maps to 
better visualize the location and scope of the fires. The imagery is 
then transmitted to the Multi-Agency Coordination Center in Redding, 
Calif., and the State Operations Center in Sacramento, which 
distribute fire data to incident commanders in the field. 

"Because Forest Service assets are stretched thin, NASA was asked to 
provide additional resources as a supplement to existing infrared 
fire imaging operations," said Jim Brass, co-principal investigator 
for the Western States Fire Mission at Ames.

>From a ground control center, NASA pilots are flying the aircraft in 
close coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration, which is 
allowing flights within the national airspace while maintaining safe 
separation from other aircraft. The FAA is allowing NASA 
unprecedented flexibility to fly these missions in support of the 
California firefighting effort. 

NASA was working with the Forest Service on a demonstration mission 
later this summer, but moved up the schedule in response to the 
widespread fires. The system was proven during a series of wildfire 
imaging demonstration missions in August and September 2007 and 
tested operationally during the Southern California fires of October 
2007.

"The NASA/Forest Service team gathered six weeks earlier than planned 
because of the extreme fires in Northern California," said Vincent 
Ambrosia, NASA Ames' principal investigator for the fire mission. 
"The team will provide state and federal agencies with critical fire 
intelligence by using NASA aircraft and technology."

NASA's Applied Sciences and Airborne Science programs and the Earth 
Science Technology Office funded development of the fire sensor. In 
the hands of operational agencies, the benefits of this NASA research 
and development effort can support nationwide wildfire fighting 
efforts.

NASA satellites also are capturing imagery of the wildfires to fill in 
gaps in airborne imagery. For a collection of the latest NASA 
satellite and Ikhana images, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/fire_and_smoke.html

	
-end-



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