It was interesting to notice the electronics rooms that were set up as Faraday cages, with all-metal walls, ceiling, etc, and contact fingers all around the doors. Obviously, a good idea for electronics right next to a 10 MW phased array transmitter antenna.
I wonder what maximum volts per meter field strength that thing could fire?
And what that would have reduced to, about 8Km away along the beam axis?
Could the power line running almost directly between Chernobyl and Duga-3 have had some unexpected beam-focussing effect?
The reason I wonder, is because I bet the Chernobyl nuclear power plant wasn't build with full Faraday cage rooms for any of the control systems. And it's only 8.5 Km away. And appears to be in the arc of potential beam fire from Duga-3.
When that accident happened, there was a lot of uncertainty about why it happened. Eventually if I recall correctly, all the blame was put on the operators, for running some tests carelessly. But I do seem to recall a few reports of instrumentation at the power plant doing weird things that night. No I don't have references. The possible significance only occurred to me long after. At that time I didn't even know Duga-3 existed.
So I wonder... did someone screw up at Duga-3, and point the beam directly at it's own power station? Or due to a hardware error?
Could it have been that EM interference alone that caused the accident by messing with the reactor control systems?
Or some combination of reactor testing and the EM-field messing up the electronics?
It would be a fair bet that if Duga-3 had anything to do with the accident (or not-so-accident), we'd *never* hear of it.
I wish someone had records of whether Woodpecker was transmitting that night.
Of all the nuclear plants in Russia, it had to be the one right next to the world's most powerful phased array radar site, that went boom.
Here's a diagram...