Nov. 4—Watchers of the night sky along much of Alaska's road system may catch a colorful splotch of light up high in the air over the weekend. Though it might look like the aurora, the red or greenish ...
Images from the HAARP camera showing speckle-like artificial optical emissions superimposed on the background natural aurora only during frames when the transmitter was on. The experiment was ...
A snowstorm that threatens to affect voting in Monday's Iowa caucuses was caused by former Defense Department research equipment, according to a conspiracy theory on social media. Some have claimed ...
The University of Alaska Fairbanks will take ownership of Gakona's High Frequency Active Auroral Program, best known as HAARP. After two bumpy years waiting for the US Air Force to decide what to do ...
HAARP open house visitor Carl Triplehorn poses in front of the facility’s array of radio antennas. A gravel road runs along the edge of HAARP’s array – that matrix of giant radio antennas on the ...
Instead of falling to the dozer blade, the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program has new life. In mid-August, U.S. Air Force General Tom Masiello shook hands with UAF's Brian Rogers and Bob ...
Alaska's High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) has drawn its fair share of conspiracy theories over the years, as it sits in Gakona, an array of antennas intended to heat the Earth's ...
We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you've consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may include adverts from us and 3rd parties based on ...
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.
The video claiming to show the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program being destroyed is from a protest at a farm in Brazil, during which electrical towers were knocked down. There have been ...
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is not capable of creating or modifying the weather, as suggested in online posts saying it was used to create October floods in New Mexico.
Amateur radio users around the world tuned in to HAARP’s Tuesday experiment, which transmitted a signal to the asteroid at 9.6 megahertz. User-published images and video can be found on Twitter with ...