HAARP ionospheric research program set to continue
August 7, 2013Brian Dodsongizmag
Reports that the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program
(HAARP) had been shut down permanently were apparently a bit premature.
According to HAARP program manager James Keeney, the facility is only
temporarily off the air while operating contractors are changed. So why
does anyone care? Despite being associated with various natural disasters over the past two decades by the conspiracy fringe, HAARP is in reality a facility for studying the ionosphere. Let’s take a look at the goings on at HAARP – past, present, and future.
HAARP was established in 1993 by the US Air Force, the US Navy, DARPA, and the University of Alaska. Located outside of Gakona, Alaska, the facility houses
a high frequency (HF) transmitter together with a phased-array antenna
to focus and direct the radiated RF power. The transmitter is roughly as
powerful as the largest military radars, generating up to 3.6 MW of RF
power in the 2.8 to 10 MHz band. HAARP is restricted to operations only
at specified frequencies in this band.
Power isn’t everything
The power isn’t what makes HAARP
different. Rather, the credit for that goes to HAARP’s phased array
antenna. Consisting of 180 individual dipole antennas placed in a field
roughly 13 hectares (33 acres) in size, this antenna array acts as a
highly directional antenna, with a beamwidth of about five degrees.
By the time the RF energy reaches the ionosphere (say, at an altitude
of 200 km /124 mi just for this example), the size of the radiated spot
is about 18 km (11 mi) in diameter, and the power density is roughly 14
mW/sq m. As the ionosphere is opaque in HAARP’s frequency band, it
absorbs nearly all of the incident power.
A tricky point, the misunderstanding of which has led to various HAARP conspiracy theories,
is the difference between radiated power and effective radiated power.
HAARP’s radiated power, the amount of actual RF power it can emit, is
3.6 MW. However, because HAARP’s antenna focuses the radiated power on a
small portion of the ionosphere, the power density on that spot is much
larger than would result if HAARP’s antenna were non-directional so
that its RF power were directed uniformly in all directions.
A fictional “effective radiated power”
can be calculated, which is the power that would have to be sent through
a non-directional antenna to provide HAARP’s power density to the
entire sky. This value is about 5.8 GW. The value is much larger than
HAARP’s actual RF power, as only 0.06 percent of the sky is illuminated
by HAARP’s antenna. But the effective radiated power appears in many conspiracy theories simply as a scary large number.
How big is the actual power density in HAARP’s ionospheric spot? The total irradiance of the Sun’s electromagnetic radiation
(everything from x-rays to extremely low frequency (ELF) radio signals)
is 1,360 W/sq m, measured by satellite outside the bulk of the Earth’s
atmosphere. HAARP’s power density is about 0.001 percent of the Sun’s
irradiance – a nearly negligible quantity. Further, while local heating
of the ionosphere is caused by HAARP (indeed, that is HAARP’s purpose),
the overall effect is rather like focusing the Sun’s light using a
magnifying glass – impressive if one is an ant, but not very significant
on larger size scales.
HAARP is designed to test the response
of a patch of the ionosphere at varying altitudes to the application of a
few mW/sq m excitation in the high frequency (HF) radio band. One known
effect is the generation of extremely low frequency (ELF) radio waves
through modulated heating. By turning the HAARP array off and on (or
more simply, by wiggling the focal point around in a repetitive pattern,
a procedure known as geometric modulation), the local ionospheric
temperature rises and falls, changing the conductivity in that portion
of the ionosphere at whatever frequency corresponds to the pattern. The
frequencies are typically in the vicinity of a few to a few hundred
Hertz.
HAARP is located where large natural electrical currents flow through the atmosphere. This auroral electrojet
flows from the position of the Sun at noon to the position of the Sun
at midnight in the north and south polar regions of the ionosphere. The
flowing currents circle the poles, rather than passing over them, and
may be thought of as sheets of current with a typical current density of
1-2 amperes per meter.
Given HAARP’s spot size of about 18 km,
the heated region has passing through it a current of about 30 kA,
depending on geomagnetic conditions.
When the ionospheric conductivity changes from HAARP’s transmissions,
the current in and around the spot also changes its distribution. That
makes the region near the spot an antenna that radiates ELF radio waves
from the ionosphere. HAARP is not, however, an efficient source of ELF
radiation – starting with 3.6 MW, the yield of ELF radio waves is less
then 10 W.
What can you do with 10 W of ELF radio
waves? Well, a typical ELF submarine communication system uses several
megawatts of ELF RF power with a frequency of 70-90 Hz. This is directed
into the surface of the Earth at points separated by about 50 km (31
mi) in order to use a large area of the Earth’s crust as a transmitting
antenna. Despite the huge power and massive antennas, the actual
transmitted power of such a system is only a few watts. So one reason
for HAARP’s development was to prototype a (relatively) small ELF
transmitter.
Magnetospheric wave injection
Another phenomenon studied by HAARP is
called magnetospheric wave injection. While most of the ELF waves
generated in the ionosphere by HAARP are directed down toward the
Earth’s surface, a small fraction leaks into the surrounding
magnetosphere. In the inner magnetosphere, wave interactions are
dominated by the Earth’s static magnetic field.
Most study has been directed to a whistler-mode instability. Imagine you have a PA system
with the volume turned up just short of the point when spontaneous
feedback will occur. If you whisper into the microphone, you will hear
your amplified whisper. However, immediately on speaking loudly into the
microphone, your voice will be drowned out by feedback at the
characteristic frequency of the PA system. The potential power output of
the PA was always available, but requires a small push to tilt the
system into runaway feedback. This behavior is rather like that of a
whistler-mode instability.
Non-linear magnetospheric amplification of such waves can be caused by resonant interactions with energetic electrons.
This being a non-linear interaction, one of the signatures is a change
of the frequency of oscillation. The one-hop (Alaska to the South
Pacific) and two-hop waves (back to Alaska) detected at the surface both
show non-linear smearing of the
wave frequency as well as amplification from the whistler-mode
instability. It appears that the magnitude of the amplification has not
been firmly established, but it is not enormous.
Ionospheric and magnetospheric
structures and effects are the subject of ongoing study at HAARP, with a
number of experiments being scheduled for later this year. Hints of
interesting behavior have emerged, such as the possibility of generating
ELF radio waves at times when the auroral electrojet has very little
current, suggesting that interesting physics is yet to be discovered and
understood.
Mind control and earthquakes
Getting back to the conspiracy theories
for a moment, these come in a plethora of bizarre and unfounded
varieties. To name just a few, HAARP is accused of triggering
earthquakes by lifting the
ionosphere over a tectonically active region, then letting it fall so
that the pressure wave will trigger the earthquake. There are two
problems with this. First, HAARP is pretty well limited to heating the
ionosphere directly over its physical location. Second, a falling object
can at best deliver the energy that went into lifting it. As we know
that energy was delivered via a 3.6 MW RF beam, it seems incredibly
unlikely that an earthquake could be triggered by turning off HAARP.
Mind control is also supposed to be
within HAARP’s capabilities. This would be accomplished by altering the
7.8 Hz Schumann resonance, which is the Earth’s lowest frequency
electromagnetic resonance. After stating as fact a totally evidence-free
relationship between life itself and the Schumann resonance, one
conspiracy theorist says that “1,700 billion watts” will apparently
drive HAARP’s mind-altering effect. That is a rather remarkable claim,
as HAARP’s maximum power is about one-five-hundred-thousandth of that
amount. And don’t forget the claim that HAARP caused Hurricane Sandy,
triggered massive tornado activity, and brought down the Twin Towers on
9/11. Personally, I don’t intend to lose much sleep over the dark side
of HAARP.
According to HAARP program manager James Keeney, the “Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) is expected on site as a client to finish up some research in
fall 2013 and winter 2014.” The temporary shutdown was described as
being due to “a contractor regime change.” The Alaska Native corporation
Ahtna, Incorporated is reportedly in talks to take over the facility
administration contract from Marsh Creek, LLC. I am sure that the new
operators will continue to keep us in touch with what really happens at
HAARP.
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