Anonymous ID: 326f46 March 17, 2021, 6:44 p.m. No.13246449   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6480 >>6585

>>13246417

Energy is frequency

 

Every human resonates a frequency code

 

Loving humans, resonate higher

 

Hateful angry humans resonate lower

 

A "Narcissist" will devour an "Empath" or higher frequency Light worker for example

 

Archons lower vibe and others "energy" feed on suffering, confusion and depression of others. You may hear the term "loosh", that refers to that energy being consumed.

 

Humans do that too, ever been around someone who drains you, you feel tired and takes awhile to recover from being around them? Many humans may not know they do this, protect yourself by healthy boundaries even in relationships with friends, work, family.

 

In public places, same thing, know your surroundings, Light workers are like a human "bug zapper" as negatives are attracted to your Light. Know yourself and ability to blind them, reflect it back and raise your frequency so the little bugs no longer bother you.

 

 

 

there must be a way to amplify?

Anonymous ID: 326f46 March 17, 2021, 6:48 p.m. No.13246479   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

There's an elevator in the Brown University Biomed building (hopefully fixed by now) that I've heard called "the elevator to hell," not because of destination but because there is a bent blade in the overhead fan. The elevator is typical of older models, a box 2 meters by 2 meters by 3 meters with requisite buzzing fluorescent, making it a perfect resonator for low-frequency sounds. As soon as the doors close, you don't really hear anything different, but you can feel your ears (and body, if you're not wearing a coat) pulsing about four times per second. Even going only two floors can leave you pretty nauseated. The fan isn't particularly powerful, but the damage to one of the blades just happens to change the air flow at a rate that is matched by the dimensions of the car. This is the basis of what is called vibroacoustic syndromeโ€”the effect of infrasonic output not on your hearing but on the various fluid-filled parts of your body.

 

People don't usually think of infrasound as sound at all. You can hear very low-frequency sounds at levels above 88โ€“100 dB down to a few cycles per second, but you can't get any tonal information out of it below about 20Hzโ€”it mostly just feels like beating pressure waves. And like any other sound, if presented at levels above 140 dB, it is going to cause pain. But the primary effects of infrasound are not on your ears but on the rest of your body.

 

Because infrasound can affect people's whole bodies, it has been under serious investigation by military and research organizations since the 1950s, largely the Navy and NASA, to figure out the effects of low-frequency vibration on people stuck on large, noisy ships with huge throbbing motors or on top of rockets launching into space. As with seemingly any bit of military research, it is the subject of speculation and devious rumors. Among the most infamous developers of infrasonic weapons was a Russian-born French researcher named Vladimir Gavreau. According to popular media at the time (and far too many current under-fact-checked web pages), Gavreau started to investigate reports of nausea in his lab that supposedly disappeared once a ventilator fan was disabled. He then launched into a series of experiments on the effects of infrasound on human subjects, with results (as reported in the press) ranging from subjects needing to be saved in the nick of time from an infrasonic "envelope of death" that damaged their internal organs to people having their organs "converted to jelly" by exposure to an infrasonic whistle.

 

By the time 166 dB is reached, people start noticing problems breathing.

 

Supposedly Gavreau had patented these, and they were the basis of secret government programs into infrasonic weapons. These would definitely qualify as acoustic weapons if you believe easily accessible web references. However, when I started digging deeper, I found that while Gavreau did exist and did do acoustic research, he had actually only written a few minor papers in the 1960s that describe human exposure to low-frequency (not infrasonic) sound, and none of the supposed patents existed. Subsequent and contemporary papers in infrasonic research that cite his work at all do so in the context of pointing out the problems of letting the press get hold of com- plex work. My personal theory is that the reason that his work survived even in the annals of conspiracy is that "Vladimir Gavreau" is just such a great moniker for a mad scientist that he had to be up to something.

 

Conspiracy theories aside, the characteristics of infrasound do lend it certain possibilities as a weapon. The low frequency of infrasonic sound and its corresponding long wavelength makes it much more capable of bending around or penetrating your body, creating an oscillating pressure system. Depending on the frequency, different parts of your body will resonate, which can have very unusual non-auditory effects. For example, one of the ones that occur at relatively safe sound levels (< 100 dB) occurs at 19Hz. If you sit in front of a very good-quality subwoofer and play a 19Hz sound (or have access to a sound programmer and get an audible sound to modulate at 19Hz), try taking off your glasses or removing your contacts. Your eyes will twitch. If you turn up the volume so you start approaching 110 dB, you may even start seeing colored lights at the periphery of your vision or ghostly gray regions in the center. This is because 19Hz is the resonant frequency of the human eyeball. The low-frequency pulsations start distorting the eyeball's shape and pushing on the retina, activating the rods and cones by pressure rather than light.* This non-auditory effect may be the basis of some supernatural folklore. In 1998,

Anonymous ID: 326f46 March 17, 2021, 8:19 p.m. No.13247045   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>13246528

>>13246756

The DNA double helix biopolymer of nucleic acid is held together by nucleotides which base pair together. In B-DNA, the most common double helical structure found in nature, the double helix is right-handed with about 10โ€“10.5 base pairs per turn.