On the 5G subject, I had this article in my files.
I have been compiling some information regarding an "Emotional Manipulation" connection.
The Believers, are the vulnerable. The fearful and easily programed people are succumbing to this situation.
Once I started asking the question of "What is the Resonant Frequency Vibration of "lower emotions"?" I started to find some interesting connections.
I have compiled some data, but I don't think it is very informative yet.
I have to put it into a coherent format.
Measurements of frequencies in different research papers are a jumble.Different terms of measurements are all just bable, and need to be correlated into the same units.
I am using Hertz units in my information, so if I forget to write hz, thats for the record.
This article describes how the outer shell casing of mRNA is shattered with frequency waves.
All the mRNA guts spill out, white blood cells flood the system, they ARE the clean up crew, and the cascade of overload begins a cytokine storm.
Ending poorly as we have been told...
New Way to Kill Viruses: Shake Them to Death
By
Michael Schirber February 05, 2008
New Way to Kill Viruses: Shake Them to Death
Three-dimensional model of an HIV virus.
(Image: © 3DScience.com)
Scientists may one day be able to
destroy viruses in the same way that opera singers presumably shatter wine glasses. New research mathematically determined the frequencies at which simple viruses could be shaken to death.
"
The capsid of a virus is something like the shell of a turtle," said physicist Otto Sankey of Arizona State University. "If the shell can be compromised [by mechanical vibrations], the virus can be inactivated."
Recent experimental evidence has shown that laser pulses tuned to the right frequency can kill certain viruses. However, locating these so-called resonant frequencies is a bit of trial and error.
"Experiments must just try a wide variety of conditions and hope that conditions are found that can lead to success," Sankey told
LiveScience.
To expedite this search, Sankey and his student Eric Dykeman have developed a way to
calculate the vibrational motion of every atom in a virus shell. From this, they can determine the lowest resonant frequencies.
As an example of their technique, the team modeled the satellite tobacco necrosis virus and found this small virus resonates strongly around 60 Gigahertz (where one Gigahertz is a billion cycles per second), as reported in the Jan. 14 issue of Physical Review Letters.
A virus' death knell
All objects have resonant frequencies at which they naturally oscillate. Pluck a guitar string and it will vibrate at a resonant frequency.
But resonating can get out of control. A famous example is the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, which warped and finally collapsed in 1940 due to a wind that rocked the bridge back and forth at one of its resonant frequencies.
Viruses are susceptible to the same kind of mechanical excitation. An experimental group led by K. T. Tsen from Arizona State University have recently shown that pulses of laser light can induce destructive vibrations in virus shells.
"The idea is that the time that the pulse is on is about a quarter of a period of a vibration," Sankey said. "Like pushing a child on a swing from rest, one impulsive push gets the virus shaking."
It is difficult to calculate
what sort of push will kill a virus, since there can be millions of atoms in its shell structure. A direct computation of each atom's movements would take several hundred thousand Gigabytes of computer memory, Sankey explained.
He and Dykeman have found a method to calculate the resonant frequencies with much less memory.
In practice
The team plans to use their technique to study other, more complicated viruses. However, it is still a long way from using this to neutralize the viruses
in infected people.
One challenge is that laser light cannot penetrate the skin very deeply. But Sankey imagines that a patient might be hooked up to a dialysis-like machine that cycles blood through a tube where it can be hit with a laser. Or perhaps, ultrasound can be used instead of lasers.
These treatments would presumably be safer for patients than many antiviral drugs that can have terrible side-effects. Normal cells should not be affected by the
virus-killing lasers or sound waves because they have resonant frequencies much lower than those of viruses, Sankey said.
Moreover, it is unlikely that viruses will develop resistance to mechanical shaking, as they do to drugs.
"This is such a new field, and there are so few experiments, that the science has not yet had sufficient time to prove itself," Sankey said. "We remain hopeful but remain skeptical at the same time."