Dear Friends,
Be Well.
David
NRL Scientists Produce Densest
Artificial Ionospheric Plasma Clouds Using HAARP
02/25/2013 07:00 EDT - 27-13r
Contact: Daniel Parry,
(202) 767-2541

U.S. Naval Research Laboratory research physicists and
engineers from the Plasma Physics Division, working at the High-frequency
Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) transmitter facility, Gakona, Alaska,
successfully produced a sustained high density plasma cloud in Earth's upper
atmosphere.
"Previous artificial plasma density clouds have
lifetimes of only ten minutes or less," said Paul Bernhardt, Ph.D., NRL
Space Use and Plasma Section. "This higher density plasma 'ball' was
sustained over one hour by the HAARP transmissions and was extinguished only
after termination of the HAARP radio beam."
Sequence of images of the glow plasma discharge
produced with transmissions at the third electron gyro harmonic using the HAARP
HF transmitter, Gakona, Alaska. The third harmonic artificial glow plasma
clouds were obtained with HAARP using transmissions at 4.34 megahertz (MHz).
The resonant frequency yielded green line (557.7 nanometer emission) with HF on
November 12, 2012, between the times of 02:26:15 to 02:26:45 GMT.
(Photo: SRI International—Elizabeth Kendall)
These glow discharges in the upper atmosphere were
generated as a part of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
sponsored Basic Research on Ionospheric Characteristics and Effects (BRIOCHE)
campaign to explore ionospheric phenomena and its impact on communications and
space weather.
Using the 3.6-megawatt high-frequency (HF) HAARP
transmitter, the plasma clouds, or balls of plasma, are being studied for use
as artificial mirrors at altitudes 50 kilometers below the natural ionosphere
and are to be used for reflection of HF radar and communications signals.
Past attempts to produce electron density enhancements
have yielded densities of 4 x 105 electrons per cubic centimeter (cm3) using HF
radio transmissions near the second, third, and fourth harmonics of the
electron cyclotron frequency. This frequency near 1.44 MHz is the rate that
electrons gyrate around the Earth's magnetic field.
The NRL group succeeded in producing artificial plasma
clouds with densities exceeding 9 x 105 electrons cm3 using HAARP transmission
at the sixth harmonic of the electron cyclotron frequency.
Optical images of the artificial plasma balls show
that they are turbulent with dynamically changing density structures.
Electrostatic waves generated by the HAARP radio transmissions are thought to
be responsible for accelerating electrons to high enough energy to produce the
glow discharge in the neutral atmosphere approaching altitudes of nearly 170
kilometers.
The artificial plasma clouds are detected with HF
radio soundings and backscatter, ultrahigh frequency (UHF) radar backscatter,
and optical imaging systems. Ground measurements of stimulated electromagnetic
emissions provide evidence of the strength and frequency for the electrostatic
waves that accelerated ambient electrons to ionizing velocities.
The NRL team is working with collaborators at SRI
International, University of Alaska Fairbanks, University of Florida, and BAE
Systems on this project to synthesize the observations with parametric
interactions theory to develop a comprehensive theory of the plasma cloud
generation. The next HAARP campaign, scheduled for early 2013, will include
experiments to develop denser, more stable ionization clouds.
No comments:
Post a Comment