This is Marshall Holloway. He worked on the Manhattan Project and was one of the main scientists to work on developing the Hydrogen Bomb. He also played an unknown role in the development of the U-2 "spy" plane. In the late 1960's Holloway went to work as a vice president for the Budd Company a builder of railroad cars. He was undoubtedly tasked with overseeing the rail based missile program.
Notes:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Holloway#Later_life
In 1955, Holloway left the Los Alamos National Laboratory for the MIT Lincoln Laboratory, where he worked on air defense projects. In 1957 he became head of the Nuclear Products-ERCO Division of ACF Industries. He was vice president of Budd Company from 1967 to 1969, when he retired to live in Jupiter, Florida, Holloway and his wife Harriet subsequently moved to Winter Haven, Florida, where his son Jerry, a retired United States Air Force officer, lived.[21] Holloway died there on June 18, 1991.[2]
The purpose of this blog is to document America's nuclear aero-space program being run out of AREA-51 using open sources. It has been said that 90% of intelligence analysis uses open sources. The preponderance of the evidence shows that the American Military runs part of their Black Space Program out of AREA-51 utilizing nuclear powered propulsion.
Sunday, 8 May 2016
Sunday, 1 May 2016
Monday, 25 April 2016
DID THE OVERHEAD THREAT OF NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST PRESSURE THE RUSSIAN'S TO MURDER STALIN?
05 March 1946
IRON CURTAIN SPEECH
May 1946
NEPA begins
23 February 1947
San Diego Union article declaring a remotely controlled atomic
airplane was being built.
24 June 1947
Kenneth Arnold UFO Mt. Rainer flying @ 1700 mph or 2.289060241 Mach. Arnold believes
that the craft was remotely controlled.
08 July 1947
The first UFO reports for project sign
July 1947
Pentagon officials were expressing alarm about the flying
disk reports
February 1949
Project Grudge
13 May 1949
First Canberra Flight
28 September 1949
“45,000 horsepower is required to drive a 25 ton plane 1500
miles an hour (MACH 1.97) at 70,000
feet. … The power requirement would jump to 200,000 horsepower at sea level
because of greater air resistance.”
U.S. May Push Efforts to Make Atomic Engine
Los Angeles Times (1923-Current File); Sep 28, 1949;
ProQuest Historical Newspapers: Los Angeles Times
pg. 12
16 October 1949
Caltech scientists on Mount Palomar observe “flying disk”
that sets off Geiger counter.
21 February 1951
A British Canberra B.2 flown by Roland Beamont became the
first jet to make a nonstop unrefueled flight across the Atlantic Ocean,
arriving in the United States for USAF evaluation.
22 February 1951
ATOM PLANE ON WAY TO DRAWING BOARD; FIRST PHASE ENDED: U.S.
Announces...
New York Times (1923-Current file); Feb 23, 1951; ProQuest
Historical Newspapers: The New York Times with Index pg. 1
12 July 1952
UFO flap
September 1952
ARDC awards contract Martin Aircraft Company to modify the
B-57 with high lift wings and powering it with the new American version of the
Rolls Royce Avon-109 engine. Meanwhile
WADC has two German aeronautical engineers, Woldemar Voigt and Richard Vogt
researching ways to achieve sustained high altitude flight. USAF Major Seaberg
an aeronautical engineer for Chance Vought Corporation until being recalled to
serve in the Korean War, was serving as assistant chief of the New Development
Office of WADC's Bombardment Branch.
05 March 1953
Stalin is murdered.
Sunday, 17 April 2016
THE MIRACLE LIGHT BEAM FROM MECHANIX ILLUSTRATED JANUARY 1963
By James H. Winchester
Nuclear tipped enemy missiles traveling at 17,000 miles an
hour are streaking for American cities. Suddenly, sharp beams of ruby-red
light, brighter than the center of the sun, stab out from the earth. The heat
of those invisible rays is powerful enough to cut a diamond or slice through
stainless steel. Meeting the intercontinental warhead head on at the incredible
speed of 186,000 miles a second, they disintegrate it while it is still
hundreds of miles away from its target.
This is only one of the revolutionary applications
envisioned through the development of a new kind of light source known as the
"laser". Lasers- the word is formed from the first letters of Light
Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation-- take ordinary light, greatly
increase its strength and direct it with pin point accuracy in a pencil-thin
beam for incredible distances without spreading out or dispersing as ordinary
light beams do.
One such laser beam has already been used to shine a light
on the moon from earth for the first time, illuminating a two mile area. If an
inch wide beam was fired from Los Angeles, it could be trained on a single
building in San Francisco, 347 miles away. This new technique of harnessing
light is creating a technological sensation in the electronic world, both
military and civilian, paralleled only by the introduction of the transistor a
decade ago.
The laser is already pointed toward many peaceful and
practical uses-- superlative communications, new dimensions, in astronomy,
wireless power transmission, knifeless surgery, navigation and mapping made
accurate to the millionth on an inch, to name a few-- but its applications for
weapons of tomorrow are the ones that stagger the imagination.
"The United States must not let the Soviet Union be the
first to develop such a system of weapons," warns blunt talking Air Force
Chief of Staff Curtis Lemay. "With them, they could neutralize our
intercontinental ballistic missiles. They could change the balance of decisive
power in their favor."
To make certain that we do not lose this race for supremacy
in any futuristic war without bullets, the Department of Defense is pouring
increasing millions into laser research and developments. Among the projects
being pushed is one which would use invisible, infrared laser light to blind
enemy troops-- temporarily or permanently. The enemy wouldn't even know how or
from where its troops were being attacked.
At the Redstone Arsenal in Alabama, the Army Ordance Missile
Command is deep into the development of a mobile light ray machine for use by
ground troops against low flying planes. A single burst from the "death
ray" gun would ignite fuel tanks. Air Force scientists are working toward
the day day when supersonic planes would fight one another with these invisible
rays. Electronic equipment would be made unworkable, the plane itself knocked
off course, its crewmen blinded.
Spy satellites, armed with laser guns, will be extremely
valuable for reconnaissance, allowing infrared photos to be taken from high
altitudes with pin point accuracy. A laser camera, for instance, aimed from New
York, could photograph a golf ball dropped over Chicago. With Substitution of
harmful rays of light for the visible light, literal "death rays"
could be directed onto earth from satellites.
Whole areas could be terrorized. Military scientists are
already testing the effect X-rays or gamma rays might have when concentrated
from a height of several hundred miles. The Navy is hard at work seeking to
adapt laser rays for underwater anti-submarine sound detection uses.
It takes a powerful tool to accomplish these, as well as
hundreds of other applications envisioned in industry, medicine, chemistry and
other peaceful fields. The laser is all of that. Two dramatic demonstrations of
this awesome energy were given last spring, less than two years after the first
laser light ray was perfected.
In one, engineers from General Electric used laser light
rays, generating temperatures in the order of 10,000 degrees F., to cut
diamonds one of the toughest substances (see cover). General Electric, as well
as others, have also used the light to pierce holes in stainless steel,
tungsten and other hard metals.
A few days after the diamond cutting demonstration, Raytheon
Co. and Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientists in Lexington, Mass.
hit the moon repeatedly with powerful bursts of laser lights, and caught the
reflections back on earth. Man had never before hit a celestial body with a
light ray.
The object of all this intensive attention, the laser, is
based on breakthroughs achieved in the use of electromagnetic radiation as a
force. First, there was the "maser," for Microwave Amplification by
Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Masers, which use invisible radio microwaves,
were developed in 1954 in a Columbia University laboratory by Dr. Charles H.
Townes. Just as the name implies, when the maser is "stimulated" by a
high frequency radio signal, a microwave, it amplifies the signal and re-emits
it.
Lasers work in a like manner, except they are stimulated by
and emit light instead of microwaves, amplifying and generating coherent energy
in the optical, or light, region of the spectrum. For this reason the laser is
sometimes called an "optical maser." The achievement of laser, first
from announced in 1960 by scientists from the Hughes Aircraft Co. was the
culmination of a half-century of research and experimenting to generate light
waves as efficient and precise as radio waves.
Just how a laser works is explained in detail by Raytheon
scientists, who’s recently announced LHM-1 is four times more powerful than any
other device in the field:
"Light of course is usually thought of as being waves
of energy. The waves being extremely short, being measured from crest to crest
in millionths of an inch. Each color light has its specific wavelength and
frequency.
That is, the waves will pour past at a certain number per
second. The longer wavelengths and lower frequencies are in the red part of the
spectrum. As the wavelengths and lower frequencies are in the red part of the
spectrum. As the wavelengths grow shorter and more waves per second are
generated, the color changes, moving toward the blue or violet end of the
spectrum.
"Light from the sun or from ordinary lamps is actually
a conglomeration of all of these colors, a mixture of all the wavelengths or
frequencies. The light pours out in an 'incoherent' label or jumble of
wavelengths or frequencies, constantly interfering with each other.
"By contrast, radio waves are what are called
'coherent.' The waves pour out evenly, rhythmically, undisturbed by other
wavelengths. Thus a radio or TV receiver can tune in on a specific wavelength,
or frequency, and receive a clear signal, undisturbed by other stations.
"In the laser, we have perfected beams of coherent light, light that is a
single color, a single wavelength, or frequency.
This is the real key to laser- the use of light beams as
radio beams are used." To generate these beams of coherent light, scientists
apply the fact that atoms contain varying amounts of energy. At one moment, an
atom may have a high level of energy. The next moment it will fall to low
level, giving off the lost energy in waves. Chromium atoms, for instance, emit
energy in red wavelengths.
To create laser beams, either in a natural or synthetic
ruby, containing atoms of chromium, is exposed to an intense flash of
incoherent light. This light "pumps" the chromium atoms up to a high
energy level. As they fall back to low energy levels, a red light of a single
wavelength and frequency is emitted. (Light sources on the order of 1000 watts
have been used to stimulate the ruby. But, recently RCA scientists used a
12-inch parabolic mirror and 50 watts of sunlight to power a laser.)
The result is an almost perfect ray-- intense red light
shooting out in a narrow controlled beam at the rate of 400 trillion unbroken
waves a second. The end focus of this ray, as an example of its concentrated
power, might be no bigger than a man's fingernail. Yet its light would be as
bright as a million 100-watt bulbs. This power can be further concentrated
through a focusing lens, as was done in the diamond cutting, to such a strength
that it vaporizes anything within the tiny area it hits.
In this manner, GE engineers, among many others, have
produced laser light with a heat of some 18,000 degrees F., about twice the
temperature of the sun's white hot surface.
In Schenectady, GE's Dr. Kiyo Tomiyasu and his associates
have also learned how to make laser light carry information. Modulated in the
same manner as radio waves, laser rays can carry far more intelligence than any
known microwave beam. Each five-thousandth-of-a-second burst of light can be
made to transmit coded information equivalent to 20,000 words. One beam
theoretically will allow transmission of 100 million simultaneous telephone
calls.
Such performance is possible because of laser's high
frequencies. Signals on laser rays are static-free and jam-proof. They are also
spy-proof because their high directional beams do not "leak" to any
important degree. Looking toward a peaceful future for lasers rather than
strict military applications, scientists see great uses in space, particularly
in communications. For instance, when a missile nose cone-- or future
spaceship--- reenters the atmosphere, it surrounds itself with a sheath of
plasma, or hot, ionized gases.
These repel radio waves. Strong laser light can penetrate
this plasma belt and be used to carry messages down to earth and back again.
Chemical manufactures are looking toward laser and its high
degree of control for use in controlling delicate chemical reactions.
Separating uranium 235 isotopes from its neighbors is one possibility. In
addition, entirely new compounds, ones never seen or heard of, may come when
chemical react under beams of laser light.
Long distances-- on earth and in space-- can be measured
with laser light with millionths of an inch accuracy. Laser beams are already
in use as a cutting tool, even for some kinds of surgery to burn off tumors on
the retina of the eye of animals and to weld damaged retinas of humans.
There are predictions that laser rays will be used for
delicate brain surgery, cutting through human tissues with a controlled
precision now impossible. The Hughes Aircraft Co. and the Sperry Rand Corp.
have developed laser powered radar that is 10,000 times more accurate than the
present radio-frequencies. (The Sperry Rand radar can measure spaceship speeds
from five miles per second down to one
ten-thousandth of an inch per second!)
Laser rays, used with telescopes, will give astronomers
clearer pictures of the outer world than ever before, enable them to chart
stars now invisible by any means from earth. Others foresee laser beams being
used to carry power, much as high tension wires are now used.
The realization of these wonders are rapidly being achieved.
Laser ranging and radar equipment is already being built. Laser navigation
systems are expected before 1965. Communications by light beams are expected to
be at work before the end of the decade. The first of the military "death
rays" will be reality, say Pentagon planners, before 1970.
HEIGHT 611 AND BEN R. RICH
Bibliography:
Rich, Ben R., and Leo Janos. Skunk Works: A Personal Memoir of My Years at Lockheed. Boston: Little, Brown, 1994. Print.
Saturday, 16 April 2016
SOVIETS SHOT DOWN AT LEAST TWO BLACKBIRDS IN THE 1980'S
The Soviets shot down at least two Blackbirds in the 1980's. This was the reason for the shutdown of the program in 1989.
The elements not marked with an x are all elements that are found in molten salt reactors.
The elements not marked with an x are all elements that are found in molten salt reactors.
29 January 1986
The USSR's Height 611 UFO crash of 29 January 1986 and the analysis of the samples of the taken from the crash site are consistent with materials used by the Blackbird. Of the materials found at the crash site one of the most interesting was a carbon based mesh. Which consisted of quartz filaments 17 microns thick, and golden wires inside each filament. The outer edges of the Blackbird used a fiberglass based composite to reduce its radar cross section. They also found titanium. Researchers that worked the site also came down with symptoms consistent with radiation poisoning.
10 August 1989
An unsubstantiated UFO case comes to us from Russia. According to the reports, not far from the city of Prohlandnyi at 1:00 AM, on August 10, 1989, Soviet military radar units picked up an unidentified flying object. An attempt was made to contact the craft, without success. The UFO was classified as "hostile." Russian defenses were put on alert, and Mig-25s were put in the air to find and identify the UFO.Soviet military radar units picked up an unidentified flying object. An attempt was made to contact the craft, without success. The UFO was classified as "hostile." Russian defenses were put on alert, and Mig-25s were put in the air to find and identify the UFO.
http://ufos.about.com/od/ufofolkloremythlegend/p/russia1989.htm
Bob Lazar appears on Las Vegas television with George Knapp.
13 November 1989
Bob Lazar appears on Las Vegas television with George Knapp.
22 November 1989
Air Force SR-71 program officially terminated.
SNAP TIMELINE
SNAP TIMELINE
1952 to 1955
The Atomic Energy Commission(AEC)* did an analysis of
nuclear power sources and evaluated them on their feasibility to be used with
future spacecraft.
1954
Specialized studies on nuclear-electric sources for space
applications were done under the Pied Piper Program conducted in 1954(Ref. 2).
These studies were later integrated into the Weapons Systems 117-L (WS 117-L)
program, which conducted studies on a wide spectrum of energy and satellite
systems for space.
1955
A joint AF-AEC committee established specifications for
nuclear power in space. This included the power, life and interrelation of the
nuclear device and spacecraft. The role of the AEC was to promote the
development and utilization of atomic energy. The Pied Piper Program was later
renamed the SNAP program.
A formal request for proposal studies was issued jointly by
the
Department of Reactor Development (DRD) of the AEC and the
Air Force Wright Air Development Center (AFWADC). AiResearch and Atomics
International (AI) proposed a Zr-H reactor coupled to a Mercury-Rankine power
conversion system. The early work was done independently by Lockheed Missiles
and Space Division(LMSD) with Thompson Ramo Wooldridge (TRW) and AI with
AiResearch of the Garrett Corporation. Funding was jointly sponsored by the AEC
for the reactor development and the AF for work on the power conversion system
(Ref. 3).
June 1957
AEC assumed complete control of the project and AI became
the prime contractor. TRW was contracted to complete work on
the power conversion system and the research being completed by AiResearch was
phased out completely by March 1958 (Ref. 3). Atomics International chose an
epithermal reactor design for space applications over a fast reactor because
the critical mass of a useful fast reactor would result in an uranium cost of
the order of one million dollars (1961). For a reactor which was to be produced
in quantity the resulting cost would have been greater than that of delivery
into space when the launch costs fell below $1000 per pound (Ref. 4). Also, for
temperatures between 315 to 10930C the Zr-H reactor was lighter than an equivalent fast reactor.
October 1957
The first SNAP critical assembly was tested in October 1957,
three weeks after Sputnik I was launched. The SNAP Experimental Reactor (SER)
was operated in 1959 and the SNAP 2 Developmental Reactor (S2DR) in 1961. The
SNAP 2 reactor had Zr-H fuel to be coupled with a Mercury-Rankine power
conversion system. Table 1 is a compilation of SNAP reactor test experience and
Table 2 outlines the development program.
1958
The AF requested Al to study a reactor designed with
thermoelectric conversion units.
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