Haarp Projekt
04.05.2014 um 07:06Dazu wäre noch zu erwähnen das diese Karo Muster sehr schnell aufgetreten ist und relativ schnell wieder verschwand.
LeFantome85 schrieb:Also ich halte das für elektromagentische wellen, die dann halt diese Muster zeichnen.Könntest du noch kurz den Mechanismus erläutern, wie elektromagnetische Wellen diese Muster erzeugen? Das ist mir noch etwas unklar.
Was eine möglichkeit wäre, wäre diesem Link zu entnehmen:Tut mir leid, dort steht leider nicht, wie durch elektromagnetische Wellen linienförmige Wolken gebildet werden können.
Das Magnetfeld der Erde, Gitterstrukturen des Erdmagnetfeldes
zaeld schrieb:wie elektromagnetische Wellen zur Auskondensation von Wasser führenEin eng gebündelter Gammastrahl:
Beekeeper schrieb:Ein eng gebündelter Gammastrahl:HAARP arbeitet aber nicht mit Gammstrahlen, sondern im unteren Megahertzbereich. Damit geht's ja schon los.
LeFantome85 schrieb:Snowden ChemtrailsMuß man jemand der es mal wieder nicht geschafft hat die Suchfunktion zu benutzen, ernst nehmen?
zaeld schrieb:HAARP arbeitet aber nicht mit Gammstrahlen, sondern im unteren Megahertzbereich. Damit geht's ja schon los.Der Beitrag von @Beekeeper war wohl nicht ernst gemeint. Er spielt auf Nebelkammern an die man als Teilchendetektor benutzt.
Air Force prepares to dismantle HAARP ahead of summer shutdown.
FAIRBANKS -- The U.S. Air Force gave official notice to Congress Wednesday that it intends to dismantle the $300 million High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program in Gakona this summer.
The shutdown of HAARP, a project created by the late Sen. Ted Stevens when he wielded great control over the U.S. defense budget, will start after a final research experiment takes place in mid-June, the Air Force said in a letter to Congress Tuesday.
While the University of Alaska has expressed interest in taking over the research site, which is off the Tok Cutoff, in an area where black spruce was cleared a quarter-century ago for the Air Force Backscatter radar project that was never completed. But the school has not volunteered to pay $5 million a year to run HAARP.
Responding to questions from Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski during a Senate hearing Wednesday, David Walker, deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force for Science, Technology and Engineering, said this is "not an area that we have any need for in the future" and it would not be a good use of Air Force research funds to keep HAARP going. "We're moving on to other ways of managing the ionosphere, which the HAARP was really designed to do," he said. "To inject energy into the ionosphere to be able to actually control it. But that work has been completed."
Comments of that sort have given rise to endless conspiracy theories, portraying HAARP as a super weapon capable of mind control or weather control, with enough juice to trigger hurricanes, tornadoes and earthquakes. Scientists say all of that is nonsense, and that the degree of ionosphere control possible through HAARP is akin to controlling the Pacific Ocean by tossing a rock into it.
Built at a cost of more than $290 million, the site has 180 antennas on 30 acres that are used to direct energy into the ionosphere, which is 55 miles to 370 miles above the Earth, and monitor changes in the flow of charged particles. Stevens was the godfather of HAARP, which he helped start two decades ago with annual earmarks slipped into the defense budget.
At the hearing on defense research and innovation, featuring six representatives of the Pentagon, no one said HAARP has a future in the defense budget.
Walker said the Air Force has maintained the site for several years and the last project is one by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Once completed, the site will close.
DARPA Director Arati Prabhakar said, "The 'P' in DARPA is projects. We're not in the business of doing the same thing forever, so very naturally as we conclude that work, we're going to move on. It's not an ongoing need for DARPA despite the fact that we had actually gotten some good value out of that infrastructure in the past."
Walker said the Air Force would like to remove critical equipment this summer to avoid the expense of winterization.
Alan Shaffer, assistant secretary of defense for research and engineering, said HAARP is a "world-class facility," but the department does not need it anymore.
"With all the other issues and problems and challenges facing the department at this time, we just don't see that that investment, over a long-term period, is where we would prioritize our investment," said Shaffer.
"No one else wants to step up to the bill, ma'am," Shaffer said to Murkowski