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Did We Fire Up H a r p Array Again

Conspiracy theorists concerned with intentional weather modification will have to notice someone else to blame, because HAARP (the Loftier Frequency Active Auroral Research Program) has airtight.

The 35-acre ionospheric research facility in remote Gakona, Alaska – 200 miles north of Anchorage – shut down in early May 2013. HAARP has an antenna assortment used past scientists to study the outer temper by zapping it with radio waves generated by 3,600 kilowatts of electricity. Not sure how, only HAARP became infamous among conspiracy theorists and some environmental activists, who believed information technology was responsible for intentional conditions modification. Dire events – such every bit Hurricane Sandy in late 2012 – have been blamed on HAARP by people called "uninformed" by scientists and other commentators. But no more. HAARP's plan manager, Dr James Keeney, said in a July 15, 2013 press release:

Currently the site is abandoned. It comes down to money. Nosotros don't take any.

According to Keeney'southward press release, the simply bright spot on HAARP'due south horizon correct at present is that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is expected on site as a client to stop up some research in autumn 2013 and winter 2014. DARPA has nearly $8.viii million in its FY 14 budget plan to research:

… concrete aspects of natural phenomena such as magnetospheric sub-storms, fire, lightning and geo-physical phenomena.

Prison Planet discussed HAARP and weather modification in its forum on June 7, 2010. That's when someone published this photo, from TruTV, purportedly showing HAARP's awesome power. Image via PrisonPlanet.
PrisonPlanet.com discussed HAARP and weather modification in its forum on June 7, 2010. That's when someone published this photo, from TruTV, purportedly showing HAARP's awesome ability to modify the weather. Image via PrisonPlanet.com.
HAARP's antenna array, with the aurora borealis or northern lights in the background. Image via U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
HAARP's antenna array, with the aurora borealis or northern lights in the background. Image via U.S. Naval Research Laboratory

The HAARP program began in 1990, funded by the U.S. Air Strength, the U.S. Navy, the University of Alaska, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). It was a scientific research facility, whose instruments directed a 3.6 MW pulsed or continuous bespeak into the ionosphere. Afterwards, the effects of the transmission and any recovery period are examined, the HAARP team has said, in order to advance the study of basic natural processes that occur in the ionosphere under the natural (but stronger) influence of solar interaction. HAARP was indeed a military facility, whose ultimate goal was to investigate the potential for developing ionospheric enhancement engineering science for radio communications and surveillance.

But weather modification? For some years now, some scientists accept been discussing the possibility of trying to change climate deliberately, in an endeavour to respond to the higher temperatures created past global warming. This area of study is called geoengineering.

Experts disagree about whether the benefits of geoengineering are worth the risks, however. Some scientists say we might need to try to absurd Earth at some bespeak, if information technology warms too rapidly. Other scientists warn against information technology, saying there are bound to be consequences of geoengineering that we haven't anticipated. They say that World's arrangement is so complicated that – despite modern tools similar satellite technology – we are a long way from fully understanding the climate arrangement and what the repercussions of geoengineering might be.

Every bit a issue, no big-calibration geoengineering projects have been undertaken yet.

Want to read more than about geoengineering? Here's an EarthSky interview from Dr. Claire Parkinson of NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center. Dr. Parkinson is lead scientist on NASA's Aqua satellite mission, and she knows a lot about climate modify and geoengineering. She's not a geoengineering fan, simply presents it all in a pretty neutral voice. Read Claire Parkinson's interview about geoengineering.

Want to read more most HAARP, from back in the celebrity days of its infamy? Endeavor this 2008 article in Popular Science: The War machine'southward Mystery Machine

Meanwhile, Keeney said, no one is on site at HAARP anymore. Access roads are blocked, buildings are chained, and the ability turned off. HAARP'southward website through the University of Alaska no longer is available; Keeney said the program tin't afford to pay for the service.

As things stand, the Air Force has possession of the facility, but if no other agency steps forward to accept over HAARP, the facility will be dismantled. Similar any researcher whose project has died from lack of funding, Keeney sounds regretful. He quipped in his press release:

If I actually could bear on the weather, I'd keep it open.

Aerial view of HAARP facility in Alaska, via Wikimedia Commons.
Aerial view of HAARP facility in Alaska, via Wikimedia Commons.

Bottom line: In the past, conspiracy theorists ofttimes defendant the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) of engaging in intentional weather modification. They will have to detect someone else to blame for the conditions because HAARP has been closed since early May, 2013.

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Source: https://earthsky.org/earth/crazy-weather-you-cant-blame-haarp-anymore/