Tuesday, December 18th., 2018 
HIDDEN MlLlTARY OPS IN THE SKY
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 17 Δεκ 2018
https://m.scmp.com/news/china/science...
          
        
      
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China and Russia band together on controversial heating experiments to modify the atmosphere
- The countries are testing a technology for possible military application, say Chinese scientists involved in the project
 - Militaries have been in a race to control the ionosphere, which allows radio signals to bounce long distances for communication, for decades
 
PUBLISHED : Monday, 17 December, 2018, 3:31am
UPDATED : Tuesday, 18 December, 2018, 5:46am
A total of five experiments were carried out in 
June. One, on June 7, caused physical disturbance over an area as large 
as 126,000 sq km (49,000 square miles), or about half the size of 
Britain.
The modified zone, looming more than 500km (310 
miles) high over Vasilsursk, a small Russian town in eastern Europe, 
experienced an electric spike with 10 times more negatively charged 
subatomic particles than surrounding regions.
Operation Z machine: China’s next weapon in the nuclear ‘arms race’
In another experiment on June 12, the 
temperature of thin, ionised gas in high altitude increased more than 
100 degrees Celsius (212 degrees Fahrenheit) because of the particle 
flux.
The particles, or electrons, were pumped into 
the sky by Sura, an atmospheric heating facility in Vasilsursk built by 
the former Soviet Union’s military during the cold war.

The Sura base fired up an array of high-power 
antennas and injected a large amount of microwaves into the high 
atmosphere. The peak power of the high frequency radio waves could reach
 260 megawatts, enough to light a small city.
Zhangheng-1, a Chinese electromagnetic 
surveillance satellite, collected the data from orbit with cutting-edge 
sensors. The pumping and fly-by required precise coordination to achieve
 effective measurement.
When Zhangheng approached the target zone, for 
instance, the sensors would switch to burst mode to analyse samples 
every half-second, much faster than usual, to increase data resolution.
Storm clouds continue to brew over Sky River rain-making project
The results were “satisfactory”, the research team reported in a paper published in the latest issue of the Chinese journal Earth and Planetary Physics.
“The detection of plasma disturbances … provides
 evidence for likely success of future related experiments,” the 
researchers said.
Professor Guo Lixin, dean of the school of 
physics and optoelectronic engineering at Xidian University in Xian and a
 leading scientist on ionosphere manipulation technology in China, said 
that the joint experimentation was extremely unusual.
“Such international cooperation is very rare for
 China,” said Guo, who was not involved in the experiment. “The 
technology involved is too sensitive.”

The sun and cosmic rays produce a large amount 
of free-flying, positively charged atoms known as ions at altitudes from
 75km to 1,000km in the Earth’s upper atmosphere. The layer, or 
ionosphere, reflects radio waves like a mirror. The ionosphere allows 
radio signals to bounce long distances for communication.
The militaries have been in a race to control the ionosphere for decades.
The Sura base in Vasilsursk is believed to be 
the world’s first large-scale facility built for the purpose. Up and 
running in 1981, it enabled Soviet scientists to manipulate the sky as 
an instrument for military operations, such as submarine communication.
High-energy microwaves can pluck the 
electromagnetic field in ionosphere like fingers playing a harp. This 
can produce very low-frequency radio signals that can penetrate the 
ground or water – sometimes to depths of more than 100 metres (328 feet)
 in the ocean, which made it a possible communication method for 
submarines.
Changing the ionosphere over enemy territory can also disrupt or cut off their communication with satellites.
We are not playing God. We are not the only country teaming up with the Russians
Chinese researcher involved in the experiment
The US military learned from the Russian experiment and built a much larger facility to conduct similar tests.
The High Frequency Active Auroral Research 
Program, or HAARP, was established in Gakona, Alaska, in the 1990s with 
funding from the US military and the Defence Advanced Research Projects 
Agency.
The HAARP facility could generate a maximum 1 gigawatt of power, nearly four times that of Sura.
China is now building an even larger and more 
advanced facility in Sanya, Hainan, with capability to manipulate the 
ionosphere over the entire South China Sea, according to an earlier 
report by the South China Morning Post.
There have been concerns that such facilities 
could be used to modify weather and even create natural disasters, 
including hurricanes, cyclones and earthquakes.
The ultra-low frequency waves generated by these
 powerful facilities could even affect the operation of human brains, 
some critics have said.
Beijing and Taipei team up in space to track earthquakes
But Dr Wang Yalu, an associate researcher with 
the China Earthquake Administration who took part in the study in June, 
dismissed such theories.
“We are just doing pure scientific research. If 
there is anything else involved, I am not informed about this,” she said
 in an interview.
The earthquake administration was involved 
because the Zhangheng-1, launched in February, was the first Chinese 
satellite capable of picking up precursory signals linked to 
earthquakes. It is operated by the Chinese military and has served both 
civilian and defence uses.
