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- HAARP to begin largest set of experiments at its new observatory
The number of experiments is the highest so far under a five-year, $9 3 million grant awarded last year by the National Science Foundation to establish the Subauroral Geophysical Observatory at HAARP The observatory’s purpose is the exploration of Earth’s upper atmosphere and geospace environment
- HAARP again open for business | Geophysical Institute
HAARP is a group of high-frequency radio transmitters powered by four diesel tugboat generators and one from a locomotive The transmitters send a focused beam of radio-wave energy into the aurora zone There, that energy can stimulate a speck of the electrical sun-Earth connection about 100 miles above our heads
- HAARP artificial airglow may be widely visible in Alaska | Geophysical . . .
Alaskans and visitors may be able to see an artificial airglow in the sky created by the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program during a four-day research campaign that starts Saturday
- Why All the Harping About HAARP? | Geophysical Institute
He compared HAARP's effect on the vast ionosphere to the warming that would be experienced by the whole Copper River if you dipped in a small electric coil of the type used to warm one single cup of coffee This is why Akasofu describes rumors he's heard circulating about HAARP as dangerous to people or the environment as pure science fiction
- Solar storm – not HAARP – creates intense auroral display
The spectacular aurora sparked questions about possible connections to recent experiments by the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP While HAARP did operate a scientific campaign May 8-10, it had no connection to the solar storm, according to Jessica Matthews, HAARP director
- Publications about HAARP Research, 1990–2010 - Geophysical Institute
Up close at HAARP: A visit to the High-Frequency Active Aurora Research Program in Alaska, where the secrets of the ionosphere are being probed CQ: the Radio Amateurs' Journal, 16, 6 Wong, A , Sequestering Greenhouse gases using Free Energy Sources, RF Ionospheric Interactions Workshop, Boulder, CO, April 19-22, 2009 Wong, A Y (1999)
- HAARP to bounce signal off asteroid in NASA experiment
An experiment to bounce a radio signal off an asteroid on Dec 27 will serve as a test for probing a larger asteroid that in 2029 will pass closer to Earth than the many geostationary satellites that orbit our planet
- HAARP to hold public open house Saturday, Aug. 27 - Geophysical Institute
The public will have the opportunity to learn about how scientists study the Earth’s ionosphere, the region between Earth's lower atmosphere and the vacuum of space, at an Aug 27, 2022, open house at the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program
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