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HAARP creates bull’s-eye in the sky

OCT 13, 2009
Physics Today
Nature News : The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program ( HAARP ), near Gakona, Alaska, has for 20 years used radio waves to probe Earth’s magnetic field and ionosphere.
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One of the most visible results of the experiments—since the facility upgraded its transmission power output from 1 to 3.6 megawatts—is that they can create lights in the sky that are similar to auroras .The technique works by using the high-frequency radio waves to accelerate electrons in the atmosphere, increasing the energy of their collisions and thereby creating a glow.In February last year, HAARP unexpectedly managed to induce a strange bull’s-eye pattern in the night sky. “This is the really exciting part—we’ve made a little artificial piece of ionosphere,” said US Air Force Research Laboratory physicist Todd Pedersen to Nature‘s Naomi Lubick .
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