November 6, 2006
A team led by NASA and U.S. Forest
Service scientists
recently collected real-time, visible and infrared data from sensors
onboard a
remotely piloted aircraft over the Esperanza Fire in
The Esperanza Fire, an arson-set fire that claimed the lives of five
firefighters, ignited on Thursday, Oct. 26, 2006. Whipped by powerful
The California Governor's Office of Emergency Services and the
From an altitude of 43,000 feet, the wildfire sensor collected and sent
100
images and more than 20 data files containing the location of the fire
perimeter over a 16-hour period on Oct. 28 and 29, 2006. The data were
delivered in real time through a satellite communications link. NASA
and Forest
Service specialists worked to familiarize the fire management team with
accessing capabilities and sensor data format. The data from the NASA
system
were used by the
The flight project was sponsored and funded by NASA's Science Mission
Directorate. The team consisted of specialists from NASA's Ames
Research
Center, Moffett Field, Calif.; NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center,
Edwards,
Calif.; the National Interagency Fire Center, Boise, Idaho.; U.S.
Forest
Service Remote Sensing Laboratory, Salt Lake City, Utah; California
Governor's
Office of Emergency Services ; California Department of Forestry and
Fire
Protection, Sacramento, Calif.; and General Atomics Aeronautical
Systems Inc.
NASA also shares the grief of the fire community in the loss of the
true heroes
of the Esperanza Fire, those that gave their lives in the battles
against this
disaster.
For more information about the
U.S. Forest Service unmanned aerial system program, visit:
http://nirops.fs.fed.us/UASDemo/
For
more information about the
Altair aircraft or General Atomics Aeronautical Systems,
visit:
http://www.ga-asi.com/
##
Contact:
650-604-4709/9000
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/news/releases/2006/06_80AR.html