Tag: microwave
Atmospheric heating and ionization above Japan’s M9 quake epicenter
by qbit on May.18, 2011, under Optical Phenomena, Satellite Imagery
First we saw the glowing blue plasma balls…
and now the infrared emissions. This is exactly the combination of phenomena one would expect to see under high power RF radiation.
(MIT Technology Review) Infrared emis

Geologists have long puzzled over anecdotal reports of strange atmospheric phenomena in the days before big earthquakes. But good data to back up these stories has been hard to come by.
If you want to read MIT’s inadequate explanation, (reads more like speculation), click here.
Granted, it’s plausible that piezoelectric discharges in the rock during an earthquake could naturally generate atmospheric plasma, but this doesn’t account for the IR emissions. Especially notable is the circular mode of the IR signal, whereas one might expect to see an irregular pattern if the IR emissions came from a geological fault. A directed energy weapon like HAARP or a Free Electron MASER could also provide an explanation for the atmospheric phenomena but without more information it’s impossible to infer a causal relationship.
HAARP and metal aerosol
by qbit on Mar.13, 2009, under Satellite Imagery, Surveillance, What are they?
Video exerpt from Clifford Carnicom explores the connection between HAARP and metal aerosol from chemtrails.
Anomalous holes in clouds (aka hole-punched clouds)
by qbit on Feb.04, 2009, under What are they?
Update: these hole-punched clouds are probably due to a jet exhaust trail flying thru a very cold cloud layer. As the exhaust disperses thru the cloud layer, ice crystals form around particulate nuclei then fall out of the sky in wisps.
•••
I’ve been saving images of unusual clouds that appear to have holes “burned” in them. Heating is one explanation, via microwave beam, such as from a
high power free electron MASER or other focused RF (radio frequency) source.
The technology to heat clouds certainly exists. See Wikipedia entry on the MASER (Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation, Predecessor to the LASER)
The larger droplets that make up clouds appear to have vaporized, much like how the sun “burns off” fog on a cool morning. Notice the crisp edges. The phenomenon is highly localized.
Another theory:
This phenomeon could also be caused by the hygroscopic nature of barium salt in jet exhaust, increasing droplet size, causing the heavier droplets to fall out of the cloud layer. More info here.
At any rate, this does not appear to be a natural phenomenon.









