He wasn’t supposed to do it, but on May 15, 1948, Lieutenant Colonel Paul H. Fackler, commanding officer of the U.S. Air Force 514th Reconnaissance Squadron Weather, flew his airplane into the seething mushroom cloud of an atomic bomb detonation.
As part of Zebra, the final shot of America’s second series of atomic tests at Enewetak atoll in the Pacific, Fackler had the job of tracking the atomic cloud from at least 10 miles away, hoping that special filters attached to the airplane would catch samples of the radioactive debris. But as he pulled away from the enormous roiling cloud in a climbing turn to the left, Fackler suddenly found his weather reconnaissance Boeing WB-29 inside a small finger-like projection of the main cloud.
“No one keeled over dead, and no one got sick,” Fackler reported later, according to History of Air Force Atomic Cloud Sampling, a government document published in January 1963. He promptly left the cloud and continued his normal flight profile until his radiation safety officer, sitting in the B-29’s nose monitoring radiation levels, announced the crew had reached their exposure limit: 100 milliroentgens, the amount a person receives annually from naturally occurring radiation from the sun and the soil. It was time to break off and head home to the air base on Kwajalein, in the Marshall Islands. Fackler flew through a few rainshowers to wash off radioactive particles.
Aside from the unstated objective of geopolitical saber-rattling, the main purpose of atomic bomb tests was to try out new weapon designs and improve existing bombs. Analyzing the tiny particles of fallout, trace elements, and short-lived radioisotopes unleashed by the nuclear reactions was the only way to get definitive data on just what had happened inside the multi-million-degree heart of an atomic explosion. But collecting that debris in the aftermath of the explosion was a challenge.
During the first postwar test series, Operation Crossroads in 1946, specially trained pilots in mothership aircraft guided unmanned drones through clouds of two consecutive explosions from a safe distance. The drones, retired Boeing B-17 bombers and Grumman F6F fighters, had boxes mounted on the fuselage or wings, lined with filter paper designed to catch radioactive particles.
Controlling the drones was tricky even under the best conditions, much less in the turbulence following a nuclear blast. Drones often crashed or went astray, and even when everything worked properly, they couldn’t always collect the high-quality samples craved by the physicists and radio-chemists at Los Alamos labs in New Mexico and Lawrence Livermore laboratory in California. All a controller could do was point his drone at the cloud and send it through blindly, hoping that by sheer luck the drone would catch a good sample and survive the landing.
But Fackler’s stunt—whether purposeful or accidental, no one ever knew for sure—had raised an intriguing prospect. By the time the United States began the Ranger series of atomic tests at the new Nevada test site in 1951, Fackler and some supportive colleagues had convinced the military and the Atomic Energy Commission to try manned sampling flights. Monitoring aircraft could vector manned aircraft into the parts of a cloud most likely to yield good samples, and manned craft could respond to rapidly changing conditions much faster than a remote-controlled craft.
The second atomic bomb to detonate in the United States was triggered at 5:45 a.m. on January 27, 1951 (Trinity, the first, exploded near Alamogordo, New Mexico, on July 16, 1945), and at the time, Fackler was piloting a WB-29 toward the mushroom cloud. He depressurized the aircraft cabin and the crew went on 100 percent oxygen to avoid inhaling radioactive dust. Then Fackler took the aircraft through the cloud. He made a second pass, and then the radiation safety officer told him they were nearing their milliroentgen limit—the mission was over. Another sampling aircraft followed Fackler’s through each of Operation Ranger’s four remaining atomic blasts.
The flights were pronounced a success, and what had begun as a simple pilot error, then explored as a cautious experiment, became a vital element of America’s nuclear weapons program. The sampling flights continued through further tests in Nevada, with the teams perfecting techniques and equipment, while Fackler pushed to establish a dedicated cloud sampling unit.
Meanwhile, the hydrogen age was about to dawn.


Comments
There was a Popular Mechanics articles published in the late 60's or early 70's claiming that the SR-71s were used to obtain cloud samples from the early Chinese tests. Is this true or just so much Pop Mechs cold war fiction?
Posted by Joule Kerma on July 16,2009 | 04:13PM
Great article about the "secret" side of our freedom. My father, Virgil Meroney, a "Cloud Sampler" written about in the article was diagnosed with bladder cancer just after retiring at 49 years old with 33 years service. When he applied to the VA for medical help, he was turned down because his illness was "not service connected". More information about radiation exposure and experimentation on military and civilians can be found in the Pulitzer Prize winning book "Plutonium Files" by Eileen Welsome.
Posted by Doug Meroney on July 19,2009 | 01:45PM
Pg 34, the pic caption states this is the first sampling flight by a jet drone. Four qt-33's were used in operation greenhouse in mar 1951.
Posted by col r gallavan usaf ret on July 22,2009 | 09:20AM
i was in the 4926th from 1956 to 1959. flew the f-84 and the b-57.the squadron deployed to indian springs afb in 1957 for the nevada tests.i flew missions in operations REDWING and HARDTACK from enewetak and operation PLUMBOB from indian springs.i left the squadron because they decided in 1958 the limit on crewmembers was 25 rem and i was transfered out.both the f-84 and b-57 external fuel tanks carried fuel as well as the sample paper during my time in the squadron.flying these missions was pretty cool at the time. wouldn't allow it now. i am a cancer survivor.one of my friends from the squadron died of cancer.have not maintained contact with other participants colonel ken waits usaf (ret.)
Posted by ken waits on July 23,2009 | 07:43PM
Bob, What Document(Page 34)are you referring to? If they are talking about "Greenhouse", then the statement is incorrect. The first successful QT-33 drone flight (unmanned) was on 8 April 1951 during Greenhouse. I was the pilot on the Director T-33 on that flight. Maj. George T. Dowling, USAF Ret.
Posted by George T. Dowling on July 25,2009 | 11:06AM
A shout-out to you, Doug. My uncle, Col. Kelsey Wynns, led the second group flying White-1. So sorry to hear about your loss. My uncle always thought it was some genetic miracle that let him outlive the other pilots. I have a copy of my uncle's memoirs about the mission plus answers to additional questions prompted by the DNA report on Operation Ivy that I will gladly send to the Smithsonian if I can get an appropriate address.[SEE BELOW] My notes say that Red-2 (unnamed in the article) was Capt. Brenner and that White-4 was Lt. Racine (who did not transit the cloud due to fueling problems). EDITORS' REPLY: For information on donating archival material to the National Air and Space Museum, please go to http://www.nasm.si.edu/research/arch/donation_form.cfm
Posted by James Carr on July 28,2009 | 02:56PM
I just want to say thanks to all of you for your service to our great country. I had uncles in WWII and Korea. It took them quite some time to talk about what they went through. One uncle flew the Dresden fire bombings, the other served on a tin can that escorted the Indianapolis. Anyway, a major shoutout to all of you (no pun intended on the major).
Posted by Stu on August 28,2009 | 07:55AM
This is what is so sad, that so many brave men and women were basically used as cannon fodder for the military and government. That last part of the article where the USAF brass wanted the safety features limited or removed altogether says it all. My hat is off to you soldiers who did these tests. It is those who treated you as expendable whom I detest.
Posted by John Dobson on September 4,2009 | 02:13PM
As a Sampler Pilot flying the F-84 in the 1954 "Castle" test series. I was a member of the 4926th Sampling Squadron at that time. I really enjoyed reading the August, 2009 article about our missions. I didn't keep in touch with any of the other pilots after a few years and don't know if any of them are still around. I feel fortunate to have not had any cancer problems and regret that many of the participants in the tests were not so lucky. The "Castle" project was the one that had the enormous device detonated that extended to such a vast area and the Japanese fishing boat, which was in the restricted area,was severly contaminated with radiation. I felt honored to have served with the other members of the squadron and proud that no serious mishaps occured during the exercise. I would like to know if it is possible to obtain some copies of the August issue for my grandkids to have? EDITORS' REPLY: Back issues are available at $7.00 each. Please send a note with the issue date, along with a check or money order payable to AIR & SPACE Magazine, to: Air & Space Magazine, Attn: Back Issues, 420 Lexington Ave., Suite 2335, New York, NY, 10170. Thank you.
Posted by L. Stewart Harding on October 16,2009 | 11:16AM
hello sirs, I have reason to believe my Australian grandfather Kenneth (Mick) Heffernan (long deceased) worked as a meteoroligist with and flew with the 4926th. Perhaps you could help verify? My family is in the posession of his U2 flying suit (we know that he did some experiments with/for the US) which bears the patch of not the 4926th, but the 26th .. but it is the exact same 'bee with catching net' ensignia i have discovered is the patch of the 4926th. Are any of you gentlemen here perhaps able to shed any light on this? EDITORS' REPLY: We cannot provide individual research assistance, but maybe one of our readers will read this and post a suggestion on how to research your question.
Posted by Bryce on January 30,2010 | 03:19AM
My second cancer is of the tongue. I did two Pacific tests and a Nevada test. My cancer is only centimeters away from throat cancers that qualify for compensation, however the tongue does not. These government types that judge never served a day. Disgusting. See my website, MyManJones.com
Posted by Don Jones on March 4,2010 | 02:59PM