Auroras are a natural occurance around the poles, but when have they ever been seen in the south? We wanted to look into this oddity, but found nothing showing that they have ever been seen so far south. That lead us to a possible fabricated event? What about HAARP?
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is a University of Alaska Fairbanks program which researches the ionosphere – the highest, ionized part of Earth’s atmosphere.
European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT) is the European equivilent located in Norway, Sweeden and Finland. There are actually as many as 8 different facilities around the globe.
HAARP experiments could cause artificial aurora over Alaska this weekend
Ancorage Daily News – November 4, 2023
Though it might look like the aurora, the red or greenish “airglow” in the ionosphere is a byproduct of a rare, four-day-long set of experiments at the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program — or HAARP — in Gakona.
“Each day, the airglow could be visible up to 300 … miles from the HAARP facility,” according to a statement from the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Why scientists used these radio transmitters to create artificial auroras
These transmitters act as heaters that excite the gasses in the upper atmosphere. When the gasses “de-excite,” they produce an airglow between 120 and 150 miles above ground, according to a notice about the project issued by the HAARP team.
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