It's a haarp thing!
(media.greatawakening.win)
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No, it has been about energizing the ionosphere to understand its physics. The installation has extensive diagnostic sensors. In order to energize, the microwaves are absorbed. There's no way it can "travel" long distances, to anywhere. I learned plasma and magneto-hydrodynamic physics in grad school. The HAARP power level is about 5 megawatts...which corresponds to maybe 6,700 horsepower. Super-automobiles like the Bugatti Chiron and others approach 2,000 horsepower. Are you seriously thinking that this much power can alter weather?
First of all- magnetohydrodynamics has absolutely nothing to do with what we are discussing.
Second of all- it’s 5 generators each at 2.9MW which is 14.5MW. You seem to think this is a trivial amount of energy for some reason. And obviously it can influence the weather as even extremely low energy exothermic reactants dispersed into the atmosphere can create storms. It’s a catalyst- not a bugatti with a fan attached to the motor 🤦♂️
Third- HAARP absolutely was designed to bounce off the ionosphere. This is why I told you to educate yourself before replying. Microwaves absorb into the ionosphere but long radio waves reflect. This is basic physics here. Where did you get the idea that the HAARP antennas exclusively broadcast 1 wavelength? Do you seriously think they would build a massive multimillion dollar electromagnetic emitter station and not have it be able to change wavelengths?
MHD is a more extensive application of plasma physics. My point was to indicate that I have an education in the subject. The ionosphere is all plasma.
I don't know where you get your information about power level, but HAARP's own website only claims 3.6 MW of transmit power. A megawatt is slightly more than a thousand horsepower. This is absolute peanuts compared to any weather phenomena, and there is no way that events in the ionosphere affect events in the troposphere.
No, HAARP was NOT designed to "bounce off the ionosphere." The power beam is absorbed by the ionosphere as heating...which is dissipated within minutes by the ionosphere's natural turbulence. By the way, antennas are designed for one wavelength, or a narrow wavelength band. Why is that? Because the antenna has to be a certain harmonic ratio with the wavelength for efficient transmission. I would say "this is basic physics here," but you have beat me to that punch line. And, yes, they would build a dedicated multi-million-dollar facility with a transmitter designed specifically to excite the ionosphere, if they were doing phenomenological research on the ionosphere. Why would you want to "change wavelengths" when that would confer no benefit to your research program?
What you have done here is to manufacture a fantasy of your own imagination and superimpose that on a facility whose purpose and technology you don't understand.