03 March 2012

from BeforeItsNews Website

 

 

 


The Advanced Modular Incoherent Scatter Radar (AMISR) is a fairly recent development, and employed in the global scientific space takeover program for the purposes of “owning the weather.”

I would like to draw your attention to information regarding the global atmospheric takeover within the scientific community, in particular that from the SRI (Stanford Science Foundation) within the NSF (National Science Foundation).

  • This advancement is allowing the ‘HAARP’ program to continue under a new name, on a global scale.
     

  • Its functions can be related to Bernard Eastlund’s statements regarding HAARP’s abilities.
     

  • The world’s atmosphere/weather patterns are being exploited.
     

  • Essentially, AMISR makes the ‘HAARP program’ mobile, modular, and global to further supposedly covert agendas.

See documents on AMISR.

AMISR is a modular, mobile radar facility that will be used by scientists and students from around the world to conduct studies of the upper atmosphere and to observe space weather events.

SRI International, under a grant from the National Science Foundation, is leading a collaborative effort in the development of AMISR, whose novel modular configuration is designed to allow relative ease of relocation for studying upper atmospheric activity around the globe.

 

Remote operation and electronic beam steering will allow researchers operate and position the radar beam instantaneously to accurately measure rapidly changing space weather events.

When completed, AMISR will consist of three separate radar faces, with each face comprised of 128 building block-like panels over a 30 x 30 meter roughly square surface.

 

AMISR is being constructed in two stages:

  • the first face in Poker Flat, Alaska, has been completed and is already being used for scientific investigations

  • the remaining two faces are under construction in Resolute Bay, Nunavut, Canada

Future AMISR locations will be determined by a scientific advisory panel.

 

Since each face of AMISR functions independently, AMISR can be deployed in up to three separate locations at the same time.

SRI International, under a grant from the National Science Foundation, is leading a collaborative effort in the development of AMISR, whose novel modular configuration is designed to allow relative ease of relocation for studying upper atmospheric activity around the globe.

 

It will allow researchers to operate and position the radar beam instantaneously, to accurately measure rapidly changing space weather events.

The Advanced Modular Incoherent Scatter Radar (AMISR) is a new ISR that employs modular solid-state and phased-array technologies and will yield measurements of the upper atmosphere and ionosphere with unprecedented versatility and power.

 

AMISR is being deployed at Poker Flat Research Range (PFRR), Chatanika, Alaska (65°N, 147°W) to investigate auroral processes.

 

 

The AMISR facility establishes a new state-of-the-art for IS radar design by implementing fully electronic beam steering with a phased array of 4096 UHF transceivers. This beam pointing capability is available on a pulse-by-pulse basis.


This installation is coordinated by SRI International.
 


Additional Information: article here.

 

 

 

AMISR Video Puerto Rico to LaPlata