Secrets Of Cold War Technology: Project Haarp A... › [ FULL ]
The challenge: How do you send a signal through the Earth or around the curve of the globe? The answer lay in the ionosphere, a shell of electrons and charged particles. HAARP was designed to "tickle" this layer with high-frequency radio waves to see if it could be turned into a giant antenna. The "Woodpecker" and Soviet Secrets
HAARP officially studied plasma physics, but its military funding sparked a firestorm of "weather warfare" theories. Critics claimed it could: Secrets of Cold War Technology: Project HAARP a...
In 2015, the Air Force transferred HAARP to the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Today, it’s open for public tours, yet its shadow remains. It stands as a reminder of an era when the sky wasn't just a ceiling, but a potential battlefield where the invisible forces of physics were the ultimate frontier. The challenge: How do you send a signal
While scientists maintain HAARP lacks the power to affect the weather (comparing its energy to a "drop of water in a boiling pot"), the project remains the ultimate symbol of Cold War-era "mad science." The Legacy The "Woodpecker" and Soviet Secrets HAARP officially studied
