High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program

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Missing image
HAARP_site.jpg
Aerial view of HAARP site, looking towards Mt. Sanford, in the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park[1] (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/ohd.html). (Image from HAARP used in accordance with terms.)

The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is a US Air Force, Navy and University of Alaska funded investigation to "understand, simulate and control ionospheric processes that might alter the performance of communication and surveillance systems" started in 1993 for a proposed twenty year series of experiments. It is similar to numerous existing ionospheric heaters around the world, and has a large suite of diagnostic instruments that facilitate its use to increase scientific understanding of ionospheric dynamics. Some controversy surrounds HAARP, many have expressed fears of it being used as a nefarious weapon. Most scientists involved in aeronomy, space science, or plasma physics dismiss these fears as unfounded.

Contents

The HAARP Site

The program site is near Gakona, Alaska (lat. 62.39° N, long 145.15° W), just West of the Wrangell-Saint Elias National Park. An environmental impact statement led to permission for an array of up to 180 antennas to be erected. HAARP has been constructed at the previous site of an over the horizon radar (OTH). A large structure, built to house the OTH now houses the HAARP control room, kitchen, and offices. Several other small structures house various instruments. The Ionospheric Research Instrument (IRI) is the primary instrument at HAARP: a high-frequency (HF) transmitter system used to temporarily modify the ionosphere. Such modification is quickly overwhelmed by natural ionospheric processes once the transmitter is turned off. Study of this modified volume yields important information for understanding natural ionospheric processes.

During active ionospheric research, the signal generated by the transmitter system is delivered to the antenna array, transmitted in an upward direction, and is partially absorbed, at an altitude between 100 to 350 km (depending on operating frequency), in a small volume a few hundred meters thick and a few tens of kilometers in diameter over the site. The intensity of the HF signal in the ionosphere is less than 3 microwatts per cm2, tens of thousands of times less than the Sun's natural electromagnetic radiation reaching the earth and hundreds of times less than even the normal random variations in intensity of the Sun's natural ultraviolet (UV) energy which creates the ionosphere. The small effects that are produced, however, can be observed with the sensitive scientific instruments installed at the HAARP facility and these observations can provide new information about the dynamics of plasmas and new insight into the processes of solar-terrestrial interactions. [2] (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/tech.html)

The HAARP site has been constructed in three distinct phases (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/phases.html). The Developmental Prototype (DP) had 18 antenna elements, organized in three columns by six rows. It was fed with a total of 360 kilowatts (KW) combined transmiter output power. The DP transmitted just enough power for the most basic of ionospheric testing.

The Filled Developmental Prototype (FDP) had 48 antenna units arrayed in six columns by eight rows, with 960 KW of transmitter power. It was fairly comparable to other ionospheric heating facilities. This was used for a number of successful scientific experiments and ionospheric exploration campaigns over the years.

The Final IRI (FIRI) will be the final build of the IRI. It has 180 antenna units, organized in 15 columns by 12 rows, yielding a theoretical maximum gain of 31 dB. A total of 3600 KW (3.6 MW) of transmitter power will feed it. The total effective radiated power (ERP) will be 3,981 MW (96 dBW). As of the summer of 2005, all the antennas were in place, but the final quota of transmitters had not yet been installed.

Each antenna element[3] (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/ant3.html)[4] (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/ant2.html) consists of a crossed dipole that can be polarized for linear, ordinary mode (O-mode), or extraordinary mode (X-mode) transmission and reception. Each part of the two section crossed dipoles are individually fed from a custom built transmitter, that has been specially designed with very low distortion. The ERP of the IRI is limited by more than a factor of 10 at its lower operating frequencies. Much of this is due to higher antenna losses and a less efficient antenna pattern.

HAARP can transmit between 2.8 and 10 MHz. This frequency range lies above the AM radio broadcast band and well below Citizens' Band frequency allocations. HAARP is only licensed to transmit in certain segments of this frequency range, however. When the IRI is transmitting, the bandwidth of the transmitted signal is 100 kHz or less. The IRI can transmit continuously (CW) or pulses as short as 100 microseconds (μs). CW transmission is generally used for ionospheric modification, while short pulses are frequently repeated, and the IRI is used as a radar system. Researchers can run experiments that use both modes of transmission, modifying the ionosphere for a predetermined amount of time, then measuring the decay of modification effects with pulsed transmissions.

Ionospheric Heating Facilities

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HAARP_comparison.gif
Comparison of HAARP with other ionospheric facilities (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/fcomp.html) (From the HAARP website, public use permitted if source cited)

The HAARP IRI is an ionospheric heater, one of many around the world. It is comparable in function and power to most of them.

Platteville

One of the earliest ionospheric heating facilities was at Platteville, Colorado, capable of radiating about 100 MW ERP. Early experiments included HF heater induced air-glow, heater-induced spread F, wide band heater-induced absorption, and heater-created field-aligned ionization. The Platteville heater operated from 1968 - 1984.

Current Facilities

The United States has three ionospheric heating facilities: HAARP, HIPAS, near Fairbanks, Alaska, and (currently offline for modifications) one at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico. The European Incoherent Scatter (http://www.eiscat.se/about.html) Scientific Association (EISCAT) operates an ionospheric heating facility, capable of transmitting over 1 GW [5] (http://www.kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/s-ramp/abstract/s19.txt) (10,000,000,000 Watts) effective radiated power (ERP), near Tromsų in Norway. Russia has the Sura ionospheric heating facility, near Nizhniy Novgorod, capable of transmitting 300 MW ERP.

Diagnostic Instrumentation

VHF Radar

UHF Radar

Digisonde

A digisonde provides ionospheric profiles, allowing scientists to choose appropriate frequencies for IRI operation. HAARP makes current and historic digisonde information available online.

HF Receivers

Fluxgate Magnetometer

A fluxgate magnetometer, built by the University of Alaska, Geophysical Institute is available to chart variations in the earth's magnetic field. Rapid and sharp changes may indicate a geomagnetic storm.

Induction Magnetometer

An induction magnetometer, provided by the University of Tokyo, measures the changing geomagnetic field in the ULF (Ultra low frequency) range of 0-5 Hz.

Research at HAARP

Ionospheric Heating

Plasma Line Observations

Stimulated Electron Emission Observations

Gyro-frequency Heating Research

Spread F Observations

Airglow Observations

Heating Induced Scintillation Observations

VLF and ELF Generation Observations

Radio Observations of Meteors

Polar Mesospheric Summer Echos

Polar Mesospheric Summer Echos (PMSE) have been studied using the IRI as a powerful radar, as well as with the 28 MHz radar, and the two VHF radars at 49 MHz and 139 MHz. The presence of multiple radars spanning both HF and VHF bands allows scientists to make comparative measurements that may someday lead to an understanding of the processes that form these elusive phenomenon.

Stated Objectives

The HAARP project aims to direct a 3.6 MW signal, in the 2.8-10 MHz region of the HF band, into the ionosphere. The signal may be pulsed or continuous wave. Then effects of the transmission and any recovery period will be examined associated instrumentation, including VHF and UHF radars, HF receivers, and optical cameras. According to the HAARP team, this will advance the study of basic natural processes that occur in the ionosphere under the natural but much stronger influence of solar interaction, as well as how the natural ionosphere affects radio signals. This will enable scientists to develop techniques to mitigate these effects in order to improve the reliability and/or performance of communication and navigation systems, which would have a wide range of applications in both the civilian and military sectors.

The project is funded by the Office of Naval Research and jointly managed by the ONR and Air Force Research Laboratory, with the principal involvement of the University of Alaska. Fourteen other universities and educational institutions have been involved in the development of the project and its instruments, namely the University of Alaska, Penn State University (ARL), Boston College, UCLA, Clemson University, Dartmouth College, Cornell University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Maryland, College Park, University of Massachusetts, MIT, Polytechnic University, Stanford University, and the University of Tulsa. The project's specifications were developed by the universities, which are continuing to play a major role in the design of future research efforts. There is both military and commercial interest in its outcome, as many communications and navigation systems depend on signals being reflected from the ionosphere or passing through the ionosphere to satellites.

The HAARP project offers annual open days to permit the general public to visit the facility, and makes a public virtue of openness; according to the team, "there are no classified documents pertaining to HAARP." Each summer, HAARP holds a summer-school for visiting students, giving them an opportunity to do research with one of the world's foremost research instruments.

HAARP Controversy

Numerous parties have found reasons to suspect that HAARP is more than the government claims it to be. Various theories draw on brain-waves, Nikolai Tesla, confusion of the ionosphere with the neutral atmosphere, and over-stated claims of HAARP supporters. Many of the concerns about HAARP have been presented so as to be dismissed as "conspiracy theories" by some, while seen as proof of nefarious governmental plotting by others.

HAARP's Detractors

Waste

The most frequently ignored criticism of HAARP is that it is expensive. The cost of building HAARP has exceeded the cost dollar-adjusted cost of similar facilities around the world. HAARP was constructed at the site of an obsoleted over-the-horizon radar facility for political reasons, but its location was less than ideal from a scientific perspective. Some believe that it was constructed as a pork barrel project for Alaska by Senator Ted Stevens.

Weapon

The objectives of the HAARP project became the subject of controversy in the mid-1990s, following claims that the antennas could be used as a weapon. A small group of American physicists aired complaints in scientific journals such as Physics and Society, charging that HAARP could be seeking ways to blow other countries' spacecraft out of the sky or disrupt communications over large portions of the planet. The physicist critics of HAARP have had little complaint about the project's current stage, but have expressed fears that it could in future be expanded into an experimental weapon.

These concerns were amplified by Bernard Eastlund, a physicist who developed some of the concepts behind HAARP in the 1980s and proposed using high-frequency radio waves to beam large amounts of power into the ionosphere, energizing its electrons and ions in order to disable incoming missiles and knock out enemy satellite communications. The US military became interested in the idea as an alternative to the laser-based Strategic Defense Initiative. However, Eastlund's ideas were eventually dropped as SDI itself mutated into the more limited National Missile Defense of today. The contractors selected to build HAARP have denied that any of Eastlund's patents were used in the development of the project.

After the physicists raised early concerns, the controversy was stoked by local activism. In September 1995, a book entitled Angels Don't Play This HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology was written by a resident of Eagle River, Alaska, claiming that the project in its present stage could be used for "geophysical warfare". HAARP has subsequently become a target for those who have suggested that it could be used to test the ability "to deliver very large amount of energy, comparable to a nuclear bomb, anywhere on earth", "changing weather patterns", "blocking all global communications", "disrupting human mental processes" and mind control, communicating with submarines, and "x-raying the earth".

Many of these statements are backed up by known information about the effects of electromagnetic radiation on human and animal biology. For instance, on the issue of disrupting human mental processes, in the early 1960's, Dr. Andrija Puharich discovered various mental effects of ELF, specifically that 7.83 Hz made a person feel good, producing an altered-state; that 10.80 Hz caused riotous behavior; and that 6.6 Hz caused depression. The mental-disruption possibilities for HAARP are the most disturbing.

On the issue of its capacity to deliver nuclear bomb type electromagnetic "snaps" wherever desired, the U.S. military says on the record that the HAARP system could give the military a tool to replace the electromagnetic pulse effect of atmospheric thermonuclear devices (still considered a viable option by the military through at least 1986).

As for the issue of geophysical warfare, this is well documented as well. Air Force documents revealed that a system had been developed for manipulating and disturbing human mental processes through pulsed radio-frequency radiation over large geographical areas. The most telling material about this technology came from writings of Zbigniew Brzezinski (former National Security Advisory to U.S. President Carter) and J.F. MacDonald (science advisor to U.S. President Johnson and a professor of Geophysics at UCLA), as they wrote about use of power-beaming transmitters for geophysical and environmental warfare. The documents showed how these effects might be caused, and the negative effects on human heath and thinking.

"An Eco-Type of Terrorism," Says U.S. Secretary of Defense

In April 1997, the then U.S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen publicly discussed the dangers of HAARP-like technology, saying "[o]thers are engaging even in an eco-type of terrorism whereby they can alter the climate, set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the use of electromagnetic waves... So there are plenty of ingenious minds out there that are at work finding ways in which they can wreak terror upon other nations... It's real, and that's the reason why we have to intensify our efforts." This quote derives from an April 1997 counterterrorism conference sponsored by former Senator Sam Nunn, quoted from "DoD News Briefing, Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen, Q&A at the Conference on Terrorism, Weapons of Mass Destruction, and U.S. Strategy," held at the University of Georgia-Athens, Apr. 28, 1997.

In short the Secretary of Defense of the United States confirmed that there are indeed novel kinds of EM weapons right now and have been in existence for some time, which have been and are being used to (1) initiate earthquakes, (2) engineer the weather and climate, and (3) initiate the eruption of volcanoes.

In October 2001, United States House of Representatives bill HR2977 was introduced by Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich. It called for the peaceful uses of space, and a ban on 'exotic weapons'. Section 7 of his 'Space Preservation Act of 2001' sought specifically to prohibit 'chemtrails', 'HAARP' and 'planet threatening weapons' by name. Kucinich even recently told the inside scoop on why his bill was yanked out of circulation. The removal of his bill was under pressure, according to Kucinich. He told the Columbus Alive newspaper (Jan. 24, 2002) that despite official denials, as head of the Armed Services oversight committee he is well acquainted with chemtrail and HAARP projects. "The truth is there's an entire program in the Dept. of Defense - 'Vision for 2020' - that's developing these weapons," Kucinich told reporter Bob Fitrakis.

Wardenclyffe

Some have claimed that the HAARP facility may be similar in operation to the Wardenclyffe Tower, developed by Nikola Tesla as a communications facility. Though never completed successfully in Tesla's lifetime due to lack of funding, and finally dismantled for scrap during wartime, people who draw parallels between HAARP and Wardenclyffe contend that its principles are currently being implemented by the HAARP project. While Tesla's tower was to be his supreme test of the applicability of transmitted power, HAARP is being used to study ionospheric effects on radio communication. Wardenclyffe also provides a basis for a current search for practical applications for focused wave and particle beams, such as the laser and maser, which according to some could have allowed wireless transceiving to any distance with negligible loss due to radiation. Tesla claimed that the Wardenclyffe tower could have produced explosive releases of energy, transmitting weaponized impulses of electromagnetic energy. The likelihood of this working was, however, never satisfactorily established, and at the time Tesla was in outright rivalry with Thomas Edison and both were making rather extreme claims.

Russians

In August 2002, further support for those critical of HAARP technology came from the State Duma (parliament) of Russia. The Duma published a critical report on HAARP written by the international affairs and defense committees, signed by 90 deputies and presented to President Vladimir Putin. The report claimed that "the U.S. is creating new integral geophysical weapons that may influence the near-Earth medium with high-frequency radio waves ... The significance of this qualitative leap could be compared to the transition from cold steel to fire arms, or from conventional weapons to nuclear weapons. This new type of weapons differs from previous types in that the near-Earth medium becomes at once an object of direct influence and its component." However, given the timing of the Russian intervention, it is likely that it was related to a controversy at the time concerning the US withdrawal in June 2002 from the Russian-American Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. This high level concern is paralled in the April 1997 statement by the U.S. Secretary of Defense over the power of such electromagnetic weaponry.

HAARP's Defenders

The critics' views have been rejected by HAARP's defenders, who have pointed out that the amount of energy at the project's disposal is minuscule compared to the colossal energies dumped into the atmosphere by solar radiation and thunderstorms. A University of Alaska, Geophysical Institute scientist has compared HAARP to an "immersion heater in the Yukon River."

It would also be unable to effect any long-lasting changes; as the ionosphere is inherently a chaotically turbulent region, any artificially induced changes would be "swept clean" within seconds or minutes at the most. Ionospheric heating experiments performed at the Arecibo Observatory's ionospheric heater and incoherent scatter radar have shown that no matter how long the ionosphere is modified, it returns to normal within the same period of time - in the absence of sunlight.

Ionospheric heating cannot be performed while the sun illuminates the ionosphere for two reasons:

  • Solar UV creates the ionospheric D-region, which absorbs the radio waves used for ionospheric heating.
  • The solar flux overwhelms any effect of ionospheric heating. (needs to be verified John Elder 01:50, 13 Jun 2005 (UTC))

HAARP's supporters also point to the lack of serious scientific evidence to support some of the more exotic claims being made about HAARP, such as the conjecture that the system caused the 2003 North America blackout or earthquakes.

Most scientists reject the extreme criticism of HAARP as "utter nonsense," especially aeronomers and space-physicists who have a solid understanding of the accusations levelled at HAARP. Books, such as Angel's don't Play this HAARP, are often circulated and ridiculed in private. The scientific community puts forth little or no effort to defend HAARP, because they perceive those who attack HAARP as lacking sufficient understanding of science to criticize HAARP competently.

See also

External links

  • High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/). US Air Force, US Navy, and University of Alaska.
  • ELF Generation Using HAARP (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/elfindex.html).
  • HAARP Cam (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/cam.fcgi) - live daylight pictures of the HAARP antenna array.
  • EISCAT's Ionospheric Heating Facility (http://www.eiscat.se/heating/)
  • Ionospheric Heating Experiment (http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/IONO/Dynasonde/SpEatHeating.htm)
  • Impact of HAARP on VLF signals (http://www-star.stanford.edu/~vlf/HAARP/) - a 2% effect.
  • Early Ionospheric Modification Work at Arecibo (http://www.eiscat.uit.no/heating/abs7.html)
  • Platteville Heating Experiments (http://grison.colorado.edu/pao-lower/History/history_references.html)
  • References on Ionospheric Interaction (http://www.haarp.alaska.edu/haarp/imref.html)
  • Polar Aeronomy and Radio Science (PARS) (http://www-star.stanford.edu/~vlf/pars/pars.htm) - ULF/ELF/VLF PROJECT
  • HAARP Executive Summary (http://www.bariumblues.com/haarp_executive_summary.htm)
  • Personal website of Jerry E. Smith (http://jerryesmith.com/) author of HAARP: The Ultimate Weapon of the Conspiracy (Adventures Unlimited Press, 1998).
  • VLF Tutorial (http://www-star.stanford.edu/~vlf/Science/Science.html) Stanford University
  • [6] (http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2004/12/305741.shtml) "HAARP Tremors Rock Earth Deep Beneath San Andreas Fault," Portland IMC
  • [7] (http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2005/01/307309.shtml) "Scalar Electromagnetics: The Secret 20th Century Parallel Technological Path." Portland IMC. The article is an assemblage of mostly information by scalar electromagnetics scientist Tom Bearden.
  • [8] (http://publish.portland.indymedia.org/en/2005/01/308464.shtml) or [9] (http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/06/1745064.php) 51 minute documentary, "HAARP: Holes in Heaven". The documentary features the authors who wrote the book Angels Don't Play this HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology, and interviews biologists, ecologists, and HAARP technologists directly associated with the project and its patents.

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