Pulsed Microwave Technology

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Pulsed Microwave Technology

Pulsed microwave voice-to-skull (or other-sound-to-skull) transmission was


discovered during World War II by radar technicians who found they could hear
the buzz of the train of pulses being transmitted by radar equipment they were
working on. This phenomenon has been studied extensively by Dr. Allan Frey,
(Willow Grove, 1965) whose work has been published in a number of reference
books.

What Dr. Frey found was that single pulses of microwave could be heard by
some people as "pops" or "clicks", while a train of uniform pulses could be heard
as a buzz, without benefit of any type of receiver.

Dr. Frey also found that a wide range of frequencies, as low as 125 MHz (well
below microwave) worked for some combination of pulse power and pulse width.
Detailed unclassified studies mapped out those frequencies and pulse
characteristics which are optimum for generation of "microwave hearing".

Very significantly, when discussing electronic mind control, is the fact that the
peak pulse power required is modest - something like 0.3 watts per square
centimeter of skull surface, and that this power level is only applied or needed for
a very small percentage of each pulse's cycle time. 0.3-watts/sq cm is about what
you get under a 250-watt heat lamp at a distance of one meter. It is not a lot of
power.

When you take into account that the pulse train is off (no signal) for most of
each cycle, the average power is so low as to be nearly undetectable. This is the
concept of "spike" waves used in radar and other military forms of
communication.

Frequencies that act as voice-to-skull carriers are not single frequencies, as, for
example TV or cell phone channels. Each sensitive frequency is actually a range
or "band" of frequencies. A technology used to reduce both interference and
detection is called "spread spectrum". Spread spectrum signals usually have the
carrier frequency "hop" around within a specified band.

Unless a receiver "knows" this hop schedule in advance, like other forms of
encryption there is virtually no chance of receiving or detecting a coherent
readable signal. Spectrum analyzers, used for detection, are receivers with a
screen. A spread spectrum signal received on a spectrum analyzer appears as just
more "static" or noise.

The actual method of the first successful unclassified voice to skull experiment
was in 1974, by Dr. Joseph C. Sharp and Mark Grove, then at the Walter Reed
Army Institute of Research. A Frey-type audible pulse was transmitted every
time the voice waveform passed down through the zero axes, a technique easily
duplicated by ham radio operators who build their own equipment.

The sensation is reported as a buzzing, clicking, or hissing which seems to


originate within or just behind the head. The phenomenon occurs with carrier
densities as low as microwatts per square centimeter with carrier frequencies
from 0.3-3.0 GHz. By proper choice of pulse characteristics, intelligent speech
may be created.

Dr. James Lin of Wayne State University has written a book entitled:
Microwave Auditory Effects and Applications. It explores the possible
mechanisms for the phenomenon, and discusses possibilities for the deaf, as
persons with certain types of hearing loss can still hear pulsed microwaves (as
tones or clicks and buzzes, if words aren't modulated on). Lin mentions the
Sharp and Grove experiment and comments: "The capability of communicating
directly with humans by pulsed microwaves is obviously not limited to the field of
therapeutic medicine."

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