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range of ecosystems, from the tropics to the high northern latitudes.”
                   The question remains if these industry and research instruments are actually “dual use” for
               planetary surveillance. The Cloud-Aerosol Transport System (CATS) on the International Space
               Station  (ISS)  employs  LiDAR  to  measure  location,  composition  and  distribution  of  aerosols,
               pollution,  “dusty  plasma,”  smoke,  and  other  particulates  in  the  atmosphere,  while  the  ISS-
               RapidScat radar scatterometer gauges solar winds. Then there’s the “fleet of 17 NASA Earth-
               observing missions currently [providing] data on the dynamic and complex Earth system” like
               the Global Precipitation Measurement Core Observatory, the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2, the
               Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment III (SAGE III), the Lightning Image Sensor (LIS), the
               Global  Ecosystem  Dynamics  Investigation  (GEDI),  the  ECOsystem  Spaceborne  Thermal
               Radiometer Experiment on Space Station (ECOSTRESS), etc.     151  All of these programs employ
               multiple sensors to taste, touch, see, hear, and smell all that is going on around and below them.
                   Earlier,  I  discussed  microscopic  sensors  narrower  than  a  human  hair,  each  with  its  own
               antenna and power source, released into the environment since at least 2002. Micron-thin Global
               Environmental MEMS (GEMS)—MEMS being microelectromechanical systems—collect “real-
               time atmospheric data essential for weather forecasting” (weather engineering) and meet military
               standards  for  radar  reflection,  according  to  staff  scientist  John  Manobianco  at  the  aerospace
               sciences and engineering division of Ensco, a systems integration and research corporation:

                     As  a  cloud  of  such  probes  dispersed  on  wind  currents  inside  a  storm,  they  would  measure  atmospheric  pressure,
                     temperature, humidity and other factors with real-time, 3-D resolution not possible with radar or satellite sensors,
                     Manobianco told United Press International. Computer models show the sensors would stay aloft for days if released
                     from several miles up in Earth’s atmosphere, he said, and other missions are possible. 152


                   NASA’s  monitoring  of  Earth’s  “vital  signs”  and  military  surveillance  are  at  least  kissing
               cousins.  CATS  was  built  by  NASA’s  Goddard  Space  Flight  Center  in  Greenbelt,  Maryland;
               ECOSTRESS, a high-resolution multiple-wavelength thermal imaging spectrometer, is managed
               by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) in Pasadena, California; LIS (lightning imaging sensor)
               was developed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama; and SAGE III
               by NASA’s Langley Research Center (Virginia) and Ball Aerospace (Boulder, Colorado). All are
               NASA and therefore military intelligence, not just ecological do-gooders. Dual-use technologies
               go hand in glove with full spectrum dominance. ECOSTRESS and CATS may actually be more
               about  checking  on  Cloverleaf’s  impact  having  on  the  “vital  signs”  of  the  Earth  and  its
               inhabitants. We must learn to read military contexts carefully omitted from media releases in
               order to understand what actually lies behind NASA space weather programs.

                     From  space,  streaks  of  white  clouds  can  be  seen  moving  across  the  Earth’s  surface.  Other  tiny  solid  and  liquid
                     particles called aerosols are also being transported around the atmosphere, but these are largely invisible to our eyes.
                     Aerosols are both natural and man-made, and include windblown desert dust, sea salt, smoke from fires, sulfurous
                     particles from volcanic eruptions, and particles from fossil fuel combustion. 153


                   Surveillance by satellite depends upon sensors [visible light, ultraviolet (UV), infrared (IR),
               or radar technologies] tracking missiles above or populations and individuals below. I mentioned
               ASAT  Brilliant  Eyes  with  its  long-wavelength  infrared  detector  focal  plane  in  the  SDI
               surveillance  satellite  system.  Later,  it  was  renamed  the  Space  and  Missile  Tracking  System
               (SMTS), and now it is a low earth orbit (LEO) component of the U.S. Air Force Space Based
               Infrared System (SBIRS). William R. Burrows in Deep Black:
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