HAARP: Resonations from the Moon

This article is part of the series: The Radiation Database: HAARP Research HQ

Please read THE BIRTH OF HAARP before proceeding


Resonance

1. The quality or condition of being resonant: words that had resonance throughout his life.
2. Richness or significance, especially in evoking an association or strong emotion: ”It is home and family that give resonance . . . to life” (George Gilder). ”Israel, gateway to Mecca, is of course a land of religious resonance and geopolitical significance” (James Wolcott).
3. Physics The increase in amplitude of oscillation of an electric or mechanical system exposed to a periodic force whose frequency is equal or very close to the natural undamped frequency of the system.
4. Physics A subatomic particle lasting too short a time to be observed directly. The existence of such particles is usually inferred from a peak in the energy distribution of its decay products.
5. Acoustics Intensification and prolongation of sound, especially of a musical tone, produced by sympathetic vibration.
6. Linguistics Intensification of vocal tones during articulation, as by the air cavities of the mouth and nasal passages.
7. Medicine The sound produced by diagnostic percussion of the normal chest.
8. Chemistry The property of a compound having simultaneously the characteristics of two or more structural forms that differ only in the distribution of electrons. Such compounds are highly stable and cannot be properly represented by a single structural formula.

Radars use resonance and computers to scan returning signals to produce images on dem radar screens.  The FAA and US Air Force use the Joint Surveillance System doppler radars to bounce high frequency (inaudible) radio waves off the ionosphere scanning for aircraft, ufo’s, and terrorists on pink elephants. By nature, these high frequency transmissions are short lived (their wavelength means they decay fast) and do not penetrate solid objects, such as stone buildings.

ELF, SLF, ULF, and VLF.

AWESOME VLF Network The Radiation Database

THIS IMAGE FROM THE RADIATION DATABASE A GOOGLE EARTH PROJECT.

In order to talk to yellow submarines far below the surface of the ocean, VLF or Very Low Frequency radio broadcasting antennas are predominately used.  Unlike radar signals, these multi-million watt broadcasts can be heard worldwide. They are studied and monitored by scientific groups for various purposes.

There’s only one reason to communicate with a submarine, nuclear warfare baby.  The signal broadcast to submarines would be very short and nondescript, like “PING” or “HEY NAO!”. This would signal the submarine to surface to receive instructions on who to obliterate in a ninja-style first-strike.  The US Navy’s Cutler VLF station is the king of the hill (1,800 kW) when it comes to signalling the apocalypse.

The Radiation Database - Cutler VLF NAA

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