Atmospheric Signal Capture
Long-duration passive recording of atmospheric phenomena across multiple frequency bands. Output rendered as monochrome waterfall prints.
Northster Labs pursues research without urgency. Some programmes have continued for decades. Results, when they arrive, are quietly published into the archive.
The Continuum research division operates without interruption. Six active programmes. 236 years of accumulated compute depth. Results are published into the institutional record.
Long-duration passive recording of atmospheric phenomena across multiple frequency bands. Output rendered as monochrome waterfall prints.
Research into long-stable storage media operating without semiconductor dependency. Intended for environments where electronic memory is unreliable.
Pen-plotted cartographic systems used by the Northster mapping division through the late 1980s. Now preserved in field operation only.
An investigation into fanless, passive-cooled workstation design for environments requiring acoustic stillness.
Field trials for low-latency machine interfacing. Results remain classified within the Northern research facilities.
Investigating the long-term archival properties of various paper stocks when exposed to constant tungsten illumination.
The receivers at Station Tyra have begun to pick up harmonics that do not correspond to any known meteorological phenomena. The patterns are recursive.
We have adjusted the tungsten filtration. The signal remains stable, though its source continues to elude triangulated capture.
Subject reports a sensation of 'mechanical stillness' when interfaced with the AX-01 array. The auditory signal is described as 'distant wind on metal'.
Stability remains at 98.4%. We are proceeding with secondary link tests under Revision IV protocols.