NASA Imaging Sensor Prepares for Western Wildfire Season

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April 11, 2013

J. D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington           
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 



Ruth Dasso Marlaire 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.                      
650-604-4709 
ruth.marlaire@xxxxxxxx 



Jennifer Jones 
U.S. Forest Service, Boise, Idaho 
208-387-5437 
jejones@xxxxxxxxx 




RELEASE: 13-101

NASA IMAGING SENSOR PREPARES FOR WESTERN WILDFIRE SEASON

WASHINGTON - Airborne imaging technology developed at NASA and 
transferred to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service 
(USFS) in 2012 is being tested to prepare for this year's wildfire 
season in the western United States. 

The Autonomous Modular Sensor (AMS) is a scanning spectrometer 
designed to help detect hot-spots, active fires, and smoldering and 
post-fire conditions. Scientists at NASA's Ames Research Center in 
Moffett Field, Calif., and USFS engineers installed it on a Cessna 
Citation aircraft that belongs to the Forest Service. The USFS plans 
to use it in operational fire imaging and measurement. 

The western United States is expected to have continued droughts this 
year resulting in increased potential for fire outbreaks, according 
to the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) in Boise, Idaho. To 
help mitigate fire danger, NASA researchers and USFS firefighters are 
collaborating to improve fire management capabilities. 

"NASA technologies in the fields of data communication, aircraft 
systems, advanced sensing systems and real-time information 
processing finally have coalesced into the operational use that 
supports national needs in wildfire management," said Vincent 
Ambrosia, principal investigator of the Wildfire Research and 
Applications Partnership project and a senior research scientist at 
Ames and California State University, Monterey Bay. 

Developed by NASA's Airborne Sciences Program, the Autonomous Modular 
Sensor acquires high-resolution imagery of the Earth's features from 
its vantage point aboard research aircraft. The sensor transmits 
nearly real-time data to ground disaster management investigators for 
analysis. 
The sensor has been modified to fly on various crewed and uncrewed 
platforms, including NASA's Ikhana remotely piloted aircraft, a 
Predator-B modified to conduct airborne research. Between 2006 and 
2010 the AMS flew on the Ikhana and NASA's B-200 King Air to 
demonstrate sensor capabilities, support national and state emergency 
requests for wildfire data, and ensure its operational readiness. 

Data gathered during those flights was used to develop and test 
algorithms for scientific programs that monitor changes in 
environmental conditions, assess global change and respond to natural 
disasters. 


The Autonomous Modular Sensor will be operated daily over wildfires 
throughout the United States, providing an unprecedented amount of 
data to the fire research and applications communities. USFS also 
will use the sensor to support other agency objectives, such as 
vegetation inventory analysis and water and river mapping. 

"I see tremendous opportunity for my agency and other land management 
agencies to benefit from the application of NASA-developed 
technology," said Everett Hinkley, national remote sensing program 
manager with USFS in Arlington, Va. "The AMS expands our current 
capabilities and offers efficiencies in a number of remote-sensing 
applications including fire, post-fire and forest health 
applications." 

NASA will continue to support the Forest Service's use of the 
Autonomous Modular Sensor. Researchers with NASA and other agencies 
will have access to the data and can request mission use through 
partnerships. 

For more information about Autonomous Modular Sensor, visit: 



http://airbornescience.nasa.gov/instrument/AMS 

For more information about NASA, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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