You're terribly modest, aren't you.
Tom Bearden alerted people to this 25 years ago, and described this in some books. It was then I first encountered and studied it. Now, piss off.
The Russians created weapons from it, very interesting cases.
I must have misinterpreted your statement. You made it sound like you didn't believe such a thing exists. For what it's worth, they aren't "waves", so calling them that is misleading.
I'm not saying they are necessarily the biggest threat to humans, but there are many different serious concerns involved, which everyone just ignores.
They indeed called waves in the literature, and they ARE waves but not conventional perpendicular propagation.
The famous PAVE PAWS case is often cited regarding health issues of high-rise pulse trains, but that involved high megawatt emissions. A satellite has very low energy levels once it reaches ground level, so the concern is mitigated. Also, Brillouin oscillations in dispersive media have been analyzed mostly only for material of uniform composition, but organic matter has a wide range of composition, which may break up the effect because penetration depends on resonant absorption of the energy, but the wide range of atomic types will dampen the effect, like trying to propagate sound through a mix of sand, gravel, and rock.
Think of their propagation like this: Instead of shaking the medium and having shockwaves ripple out from the source as you would when creating a magnetic wave, with the electric component you are applying pressure to the medium which compresses the point that the energy is received at.
The energy level is only one of many different pathways for potential damage. Focusing on that alone is the trick the regulators play. Best not to echo their propaganda.
That is correct, as the electric field longitudinally oscillates dipoles along the path, which is perfectly reasonable to happen. The magnetic field is then radial around the longitudinal vector. Historically, there are really interesting photos of the Russians creating a luminous half-dome this way too.
You're terribly modest, aren't you. Tom Bearden alerted people to this 25 years ago, and described this in some books. It was then I first encountered and studied it. Now, piss off.
The Russians created weapons from it, very interesting cases.
I must have misinterpreted your statement. You made it sound like you didn't believe such a thing exists. For what it's worth, they aren't "waves", so calling them that is misleading.
I'm not saying they are necessarily the biggest threat to humans, but there are many different serious concerns involved, which everyone just ignores.
They indeed called waves in the literature, and they ARE waves but not conventional perpendicular propagation.
The famous PAVE PAWS case is often cited regarding health issues of high-rise pulse trains, but that involved high megawatt emissions. A satellite has very low energy levels once it reaches ground level, so the concern is mitigated. Also, Brillouin oscillations in dispersive media have been analyzed mostly only for material of uniform composition, but organic matter has a wide range of composition, which may break up the effect because penetration depends on resonant absorption of the energy, but the wide range of atomic types will dampen the effect, like trying to propagate sound through a mix of sand, gravel, and rock.
Think of their propagation like this: Instead of shaking the medium and having shockwaves ripple out from the source as you would when creating a magnetic wave, with the electric component you are applying pressure to the medium which compresses the point that the energy is received at.
The energy level is only one of many different pathways for potential damage. Focusing on that alone is the trick the regulators play. Best not to echo their propaganda.
That is correct, as the electric field longitudinally oscillates dipoles along the path, which is perfectly reasonable to happen. The magnetic field is then radial around the longitudinal vector. Historically, there are really interesting photos of the Russians creating a luminous half-dome this way too.