From: Carole on
Vibrational Medicine: Scientists Kill Viruses by Blasting them with Resonant
Frequencies
http://www.naturalnews.com/023855.html

Thursday, August 14, 2008 by: David Gutierrez |

(NaturalNews) Physicists at Arizona State University say they have developed
a method to calculate the exact frequency that it would take to shake a
virus to death, according to an article published in the journal Physical
Review Letters.

Researchers have discovered that when viruses are bombarded with laser
pulses of the right frequency, they shake apart. This arises from an
inherent characteristic of all objects called a "resonant frequency," which
is the frequency at which an object naturally vibrates.

Resonant frequencies are the key to stringed instruments, in which a string
of a certain material, thickness and length has a resonant frequency that
produces a specific musical note. But resonant frequencies can also cause
objects to shake so uncontrollably that their stability is undermined, as
when a wind shook the Tacoma Narrows Bridge at its resonant frequency in
1940, causing it to collapse.

Because the shell of a single virus can contain millions of atoms, it is
difficult to calculate a given virus' resonant frequency except by trial and
error. But in the current study, researchers successfully calculated the
resonant frequency of a simple satellite tobacco necrosis virus. The next
step for the researchers is to determine if the same technique will work for
other, more complex viruses.

Although practical applications are probably a long way off, vibrational
antiviral treatments have a number of benefits over chemical approaches.
First of all, while many antiviral drugs are very harsh on the body and have
dangerous or debilitating side effects, the frequencies used to disrupt the
viruses should have no effect on human or even bacterial cells, which are
much larger and consequently have significantly lower resonant frequencies.

In addition, because a resonant frequency is an inherent characteristic of a
virus' makeup, researchers say it is unlikely that resistance to it could
develop.

Among the obstacles toward creating vibrational antiviral therapy is the
fact that lasers have trouble penetrating the skin. Researchers have
suggested that ultrasound could be used instead, or perhaps a dialysis-type
machine that cycles of blood out of the body, irradiates it, then cycles it
back in.

carole
www.cellsalts.net



From: Benj on
On Aug 17, 12:35 am, "Carole" <hub...(a)iimetro.com.au> wrote:
> Vibrational Medicine: Scientists Kill Viruses by Blasting them with Resonant
> Frequencieshttp://www.naturalnews.com/023855.html
>
> Thursday, August 14, 2008 by: David Gutierrez |
>
> (NaturalNews) Physicists at Arizona State University say they have developed
> a method to calculate the exact frequency that it would take to shake a
> virus to death, according to an article published in the journal Physical
> Review Letters.

The "conspiracy" here is that the idea of shaking a virus to death was
discovered many years ago by Royal Rife, who together with several
doctors who worked with his ideas were mercilessly hounded out of
existence. Labs burned. People forced into exile. Trials. Lawyers.
And all the rest. Disease is big business and some people are shall we
say, less that enthusiastic about finding cures.



From: D. C. Sessions on
In message <PUNpk.29012$IK1.17975(a)news-server.bigpond.net.au>, Carole wrote:

> Vibrational Medicine: Scientists Kill Viruses by Blasting them with Resonant
> Frequencies
> http://www.naturalnews.com/023855.html

Carole, do you know the resonant frequency of a virus?
(It's not complicated. Same basic phenomena as the
resonant frequency of anything else, such as a tuning
fork.)

--
| The brighter the stupid burns, the more |
| chance that someone will see the light. |
+- D. C. Sessions <dcs(a)lumbercartel.com> -+
From: Mark Probert on
On Aug 17, 12:35 am, "Carole" <hub...(a)iimetro.com.au> wrote:
> Vibrational Medicine: Scientists Kill Viruses by Blasting them with Resonant
> Frequencieshttp://www.naturalnews.com/023855.html
>
> Thursday, August 14, 2008 by: David Gutierrez |
>
> (NaturalNews) Physicists at Arizona State University say they have developed
> a method to calculate the exact frequency that it would take to shake a
> virus to death, according to an article published in the journal Physical
> Review Letters.
>
> Researchers have discovered that when viruses are bombarded with laser
> pulses of the right frequency, they shake apart. This arises from an
> inherent characteristic of all objects called a "resonant frequency," which
> is the frequency at which an object naturally vibrates.
>
> Resonant frequencies are the key to stringed instruments, in which a string
> of a certain material, thickness and length has a resonant frequency that
> produces a specific musical note. But resonant frequencies can also cause
> objects to shake so uncontrollably that their stability is undermined, as
> when a wind shook the Tacoma Narrows Bridge at its resonant frequency in
> 1940, causing it to collapse.
>
> Because the shell of a single virus can contain millions of atoms, it is
> difficult to calculate a given virus' resonant frequency except by trial and
> error. But in the current study, researchers successfully calculated the
> resonant frequency of a simple satellite tobacco necrosis virus. The next
> step for the researchers is to determine if the same technique will work for
> other, more complex viruses.
>
> Although practical applications are probably a long way off, vibrational
> antiviral treatments have a number of benefits over chemical approaches.
> First of all, while many antiviral drugs are very harsh on the body and have
> dangerous or debilitating side effects, the frequencies used to disrupt the
> viruses should have no effect on human or even bacterial cells, which are
> much larger and consequently have significantly lower resonant frequencies.
>
> In addition, because a resonant frequency is an inherent characteristic of a
> virus' makeup, researchers say it is unlikely that resistance to it could
> develop.
>
> Among the obstacles toward creating vibrational antiviral therapy is the
> fact that lasers have trouble penetrating the skin. Researchers have
> suggested that ultrasound could be used instead, or perhaps a dialysis-type
> machine that cycles of blood out of the body, irradiates it, then cycles it
> back in.
>
> carolewww.cellsalts.net

HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMmmm

Carole? Oh Carole? You still there?

From: Jan Drew on

"Mark Probert" <mark.probert(a)gmail.com> wrote in message
news:a9a0a28c-a067-4d37-9fa3-6bb0abde3d31(a)j22g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
On Aug 17, 12:35 am, "Carole" <hub...(a)iimetro.com.au> wrote:
> Vibrational Medicine: Scientists Kill Viruses by Blasting them with
> Resonant
> Frequencieshttp://www.naturalnews.com/023855.html
>
> Thursday, August 14, 2008 by: David Gutierrez |
>
> (NaturalNews) Physicists at Arizona State University say they have
> developed
> a method to calculate the exact frequency that it would take to shake a
> virus to death, according to an article published in the journal Physical
> Review Letters.
>
> Researchers have discovered that when viruses are bombarded with laser
> pulses of the right frequency, they shake apart. This arises from an
> inherent characteristic of all objects called a "resonant frequency,"
> which
> is the frequency at which an object naturally vibrates.
>
> Resonant frequencies are the key to stringed instruments, in which a
> string
> of a certain material, thickness and length has a resonant frequency that
> produces a specific musical note. But resonant frequencies can also cause
> objects to shake so uncontrollably that their stability is undermined, as
> when a wind shook the Tacoma Narrows Bridge at its resonant frequency in
> 1940, causing it to collapse.
>
> Because the shell of a single virus can contain millions of atoms, it is
> difficult to calculate a given virus' resonant frequency except by trial
> and
> error. But in the current study, researchers successfully calculated the
> resonant frequency of a simple satellite tobacco necrosis virus. The next
> step for the researchers is to determine if the same technique will work
> for
> other, more complex viruses.
>
> Although practical applications are probably a long way off, vibrational
> antiviral treatments have a number of benefits over chemical approaches.
> First of all, while many antiviral drugs are very harsh on the body and
> have
> dangerous or debilitating side effects, the frequencies used to disrupt
> the
> viruses should have no effect on human or even bacterial cells, which are
> much larger and consequently have significantly lower resonant
> frequencies.
>
> In addition, because a resonant frequency is an inherent characteristic of
> a
> virus' makeup, researchers say it is unlikely that resistance to it could
> develop.
>
> Among the obstacles toward creating vibrational antiviral therapy is the
> fact that lasers have trouble penetrating the skin. Researchers have
> suggested that ultrasound could be used instead, or perhaps a
> dialysis-type
> machine that cycles of blood out of the body, irradiates it, then cycles
> it
> back in.
>
> carolewww.cellsalts.net

HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMmmm

Carole? Oh Carole? You still there?

LOL! Poor Mark S Probert reads a post and asks if the poster in still here.