News comes to us this week that the famous HAARP antenna array is to be brought back into service for experiments by the University of Alaska. Built in the 1990s for the US Air Force’s High Frequency ...
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 ...
A group of researchers is attempting to bounce radio signals off a 500-foot-wide asteroid during its close flyby of Earth on Tuesday. The High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is ...
A National Science Foundation grant will allow the University of Alaska Fairbanks to expand activities at the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program in Gakona. The U.S. military built HAARP in ...
The University of Alaska Fairbanks is operating the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program facility, or HAARP, for 13 projects this month. The projects are the latest made possible by federal ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This array of antennas can create "artificial auroras." If you live in and around Gulkana, Alaska and recently saw some eerie ...
Researchers in Alaska have blasted a beam of radio signals some 374 million miles into space—all the way to Jupiter. Though the experiment sounds like something out of a science fiction novel, it’s ...
News comes to us this week that the famous HAARP antenna array is to be brought back into service for experiments by the University of Alaska. Built in the 1990s for the US Air Force’s High Frequency ...
Think of Alaska and the Aurora Borealis comes to mind. Solar particles are captured by Earth’s magnetic field and flung to the North and South magnetic poles. There, they collide with atmospheric ...
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