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 ...
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 ...
Experiments are scheduled through the end of the month at the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program or HAARP facility. It’s the first time science is being conducted at the ionospheric ...
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 ...
Alaska's High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) has drawn its fair share of conspiracy theories over the years, as it sits in Gakona, an array of antennas intended to heat the Earth's ...
It sure looks suspicious: a remote military compound in the south-central Alaskan wilderness filled with 180 weird-looking antennas. It's the home of the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program ...
The HAARP antenna field looking toward the main facility building cluster. Photo courtesy Chris Fallen, KL3WX. See this image larger on the ARRL website at the bottom of the original article. This ...