(Ref: NOAA Image g10sat.gif, dated 4/24/99)
By Ronald S. Regehr
10 May 1999
Air Force warplanes spraying poisons on America?
That's the claim of Ken
Welsh of Houston, Texas, on Jeff Renses' website "Sightings"
(http://www.sightings.com) using as evidence the satellite
image NOAA
g10sat.gif. The photo shows anomalous cloud formations--"contrails"?
Yet
careful analysis, at least of that, image shows the contrail-like
cloud
forms are orders-of-magnitude too large to have been
created by military or
any other aircraft.
I have been an aerospace engineer for 36+ years specializing
in satellite
technology. The NOAA image on "Sightings", which
gave rise to controversy
shows several strange configurations which indeed resemble
aircraft
contrails. However, as the analysis below indicates,
the size and volume of
the vapor contained in the configuration is far too large
to have been
created by any aircraft. Thus Walsh's claim, in
his article Spraying of
Cities is Real, cannot be true. And although I
cannot explain the strange
cloud formations, Walsh's allegation that the image proves
"fuel aerosol
poisoning of America" is without merit.
Circulation of satellite images showing what appear to
be contrails have led
to rumors about alleged USAF involvement in some type
of "chemical warfare"
against citizens of this nation. Walsh contends KC-10
aircraft
McDonnell-Douglas DC-10 aircraft converted to perform
in-flight refueling)
are engaged in dispersing chemical/biological aerosols
over the United
States, resulting in illness and possibly deathto some
people.
"Sightings" recently posted an image (g10sat.gif)
with about a dozen of
these phenomena Walsh calls "contrails," located roughly
350 km west of the
northern California/southern Oregon coast. It is
this image that seemingly
proves the existence of a heinous poisoning operation.
My examination of the NOAA satellite image consisted of
measurement of the
"contrails," their distance from the coast, and simple
mathematics to
determine the possible volume of the "contrails."
This examination
convinced me the phenomena observed in image g10sat.gif
are not created by
aircraft dispensing aerosols.
Several other factors, more visceral than cerebral, also
convince me of the
absurdity of this particular image being evidence of
any covert action. One
thing leaders (be they parents, corporate heads, or USAF
generals)
assiduously avoid is surprises. They want predictability
and repeatibility.
Without these two factors they are vulnerable to exposure--or
worse. It
makes no sense for the military to engage forces
so far off the coast.
Wind and weather patterns could easily cause the aerosols
to drift far from
their intended target--or miss it altogether! Further,
dissipation of the
aerosols could render them benign, further negating any
effect. Lastly, for
the exercise to be of any value it must have tactical
applications--meaning
the ability to repeatedly perform similar "attacks"
should the need arise.
The "fuel aerosol poisoning of America" scenario fails
to satisfy these
basic military criteria, further leading me to the conclusion
the cloud
formations shown in the NOAA image are not manmade.
The Data
The State of California border with Oregon is roughly
320 kilometers (km).
The NOAA image shows the border to measure 31 mm,
resulting in
approximately 1 mm = 10 km.
The "contrails" on the image measure about 1.5 mm by
30 mm, yielding a cloud
approximaty 15 km wide and 300 km long
The KC-10 carries about 350,000 pounds of liquid (43,750
gallons of water)
The Assumptions
The "contrails" are cylindrical (again, to simplify the
math)
The "contrail's" behavior approximates that of ordinary
clouds
The "chemical agent" being dispersed is waterborne
The KC-10 is flying at 40,000 feet (near its service
ceiling)
The Math
The volume of a cylinder is calculated using the equation
V = r2 l
where: V = the volume of the cylinder
r = the radius of the cylinder, 7.5
km
l = the length of the cylinder, 300 km
hence: V = 3.14 x (7.5km2) x 300 km
= 3.14
x 56.25 km2 x 300 km
V = 53,000 km3
We want to use the minimum amount of water vapor per
cubic meter required to
create a cloud at an altitude of 40,000 ft. At
this altitude, the
temperature is -53C, which yields a vapor density of
10-4 kg/m3. This, in
turn, results in a "contrail" containing about 1.1 x
1010 pounds of water.
Recall a KC-10 has a 350,0000 pound capacity. Thus,
to create each typical
"contrail" as represented on image g10sat.gif would require
334,285.7 KC-10
tankers. Total USAF procurement of KC-10 was 59.
* * *
Ronald Regehr (regehr@lasal.net) is MUFON State
Section Director for Grand
and San Juan Counties, Utah. His article Do Our
Spy Satellites See UFOs?
appeared in the April 1994 MUFON Journal (No. 312).
This article contains
772 words.