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M I D N I G H T!
Originally posted by JackyMenace
Do you think they would be stupid (or cocky) enough to turn it on at midnight? Could just be whatever program runs that monitor reset at midnight or something. Have you checked the same time on other days?
edit: the time does seem quite coincidental.edit on 21-12-2012 by JackyMenace because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Arken
12 Mhz above "Coco Island and Christmas Island" right in front of Indonesia...
This Mean something?edit on 21-12-2012 by Arken because: (no reason given)
www.haarp.alaska.edu...
Among these, the induction magnetometer most efficiently detects Pc1 waves in the frequency range from 0.1 Hz to 3 Hz. Pc1 signals are the result of ion-cyclotron radiation generated near the equatorial plane of the outer-magnetosphere that make their way to the ionosphere guided by the magnetic lines of force.
Originally posted by Phage
Midnight UTC = 3PM Alaska time.
Sunset. Things often change in the ionosphere at sunset. Things that affect electromagnetic propagation.
The magnetometer detects this sort of thing.
www.haarp.alaska.edu...
Among these, the induction magnetometer most efficiently detects Pc1 waves in the frequency range from 0.1 Hz to 3 Hz. Pc1 signals are the result of ion-cyclotron radiation generated near the equatorial plane of the outer-magnetosphere that make their way to the ionosphere guided by the magnetic lines of force.edit on 12/21/2012 by Phage because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by cbskywarn
Not midnight, 3PM in Alaska.
Not "exactly", looks like about 10 minutes before the hour to me. But maybe somebody parked a car and left the engine running so it wouldn't freeze solid. It's a sensitive instrument.