Open house at HAARP planned

August 15, 2016

Rod Boyce

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Photo by Christopher Fallen. The HAARP research facility in Gakona, Alaska, with Mount Sanford in the background.
Photo by Christopher Fallen. The HAARP research facility in Gakona, Alaska, with Mount Sanford in the background.


The lecture will be Friday, Aug. 26, at 7 p.m. at the Wrangell-St.Elias National Park Visitor Center auditorium, 106.8-mile Richardson Highway, 10 miles south of Glennallen. The lecture is titled “Radio modification of the ionosphere and who uses this HAARP thing anyway?” It is presented in partnership with the Wrangell Institute for Science and Environment and is aimed at ages 15 and up.

The open house will be held on Saturday, Aug. 27, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the HAARP Research Site,  11.3-mile Tok Cutoff, Gakona, Alaska. HAARP is approximately 240 miles from Fairbanks.

The open house features tours of the facility as well as talks and interactive displays covering a variety of geophysical processes, including aurora, permafrost and space weather. A mobile planetarium and unmanned aerial vehicles will be on site, and food will be provided. This event is suitable for all ages. Both events are free and open to the public.

Operation of the HAARP research facility, including the world’s most capable high-frequency transmitter for study of the ionosphere, was transferred from the U.S. Air Force to UAF on Aug. 15, 2015.

Download a poster for the open house.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Sue Mitchell, 907-474-5823, sue.mitchell@alaska.edu