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Climate Change

July 16, 2023



HAARP


The World Health Organization "WHO" calls climate change
the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century.





Many years ago I read some reports...
about something called HAARP.
I'll have to retrace my research to find those reports...
but... my guess is... that...
anyone who reads my essays...
will question the information anyway...
and seek confirmation of it...
and will find the links I've lost over the years.

From memory:
One report described how HAARP could stretch the ionosphere...
you know... that thing that keeps the earth protected from space...?
that...?
it described how that ionosphere can stretch very thin... but that...
it lets in the cold from space...
which would affect... the weather of the world.

At the time that I read this report...
(if I even remember the correct details...)
I did not delve very far into the science of it...
however... some people had...
some people had done the science on it...
and one person had even invented an "anti-HAARP" machine.

The machine was... very big speakers in the back of a van...
blasting a very high frequency noise...
inaudible to the human ear.
He had meters on the set up... and controls.

In his experiment... with his machine...
he turns it on...
and lets the camera raise to the sky above him...
where there is a very round hole in the clouds.

Now that HAARP is owned by the university... and not DARPA...
the university is offering to rent out the use of it... for... research.







University of Alaska page
archived page

The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP,
is a scientific endeavor aimed at studying the properties and behavior
of the ionosphere.

"The ionosphere stretches roughly 50 to 400 miles above Earth's surface,
right at the edge of space. Along with the neutral upper atmosphere,
the ionosphere forms the boundary between Earth's lower atmosphere --
where we live and breathe -- and the vacuum of space."

(NASA)


"Operation of the research facility was transferred from the United States Air Force to the University of Alaska Fairbanks on Aug. 11, 2015, allowing HAARP to continue with exploration of ionospheric phenomenology via a land-use cooperative research and development agreement.

"HAARP is the world's most capable high-power, high-frequency transmitter for study of the ionosphere. The HAARP program is committed to developing a world-class ionospheric research facility consisting of:
"The Ionospheric Research Instrument,
a high power transmitter facility operating in the High Frequency range.
The IRI can be used to temporarily excite a limited area of the ionosphere for scientific study.

"A sophisticated suite of scientific or diagnostic instruments that can be used to observe the physical processes that occur in the excited region. Observation of the processes resulting from the use of the IRI in a controlled manner will allow scientists to better understand processes that occur continuously under the natural stimulation of the sun.

"Scientific instruments installed at the HAARP Observatory can also be used for a variety of continuing research efforts which do not involve the use of the IRI but are strictly passive. These include ionospheric characterization using satellite beacons, telescopic observation of the fine structure in the aurora and documentation of long-term variations in the ozone layer.

"Collaborative Opportunities
The HAARP site is an ideal location for deploying synergistic instrumentation for studying radio and space physics. Investigators interested in deploying diagnostic apparatus including radio receivers and radar, lidar, optical imagers and spectrometers, and interferometers are encouraged to contact the HAARP Ionospheric and Radio Science Laboratory at UAF-GI-HAARP@alaska.edu or 907-474-1100."



"HAARP
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is a University of Alaska Fairbanks program which researches the ionosphere - the highest, ionized part of Earth's atmosphere.




"Published: 23 April 2008 ... Nature

Atmospheric physics: Heating up the heavens Battling rumours of death beams and mind control, an ionosphere research facility in Alaska finally brings science to the fore.
Sharon Weinberger reports."




"In the early 1930s, test transmissions of Radio Luxembourg inadvertently provided evidence of the first radio modification of the ionosphere; HAARP ran a series of experiments in 2017 using the eponymous Luxembourg Effect.



In radiophysics, the Luxemburg–Gorky effect (named after Radio Luxemburg and the city of Gorky (Nizhny Novgorod)) is a phenomenon of cross modulation between two radio waves, one of which is strong, passing through the same part of a medium, especially a conductive region of atmosphere or a plasma. Current theory seems to be that the conductivity of the ionosphere is affected by the presence of strong radio waves. The strength of a radio wave returning from the ionosphere to a distant point is dependent on this conductivity level.








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