Mobile
Magnetic Waves
Mobile
Magnetic Waves, that I have accidentally discovered, are both unusual
and unexplained. Knowing
how
I
accidentally
discovered them goes a long
way
towards knowing more about them and
their nature. So Far ,
I have found
two different ( in my estimation
, at least ) ,
" single/s " and " complex "
wave types.
I'll identify and
differentiate them by their general
characteristics. They
both are " coherent " magnetic
waves. Different from RF SLF waves
, you have
to be in " direct
" contact with them to find them. They
clearly exhibit a
"
sharp " , well defined ,
nature ( SLF RF waves have a broad , wider ,
nature
and can be
detected a longer distance
away ) .
I'm reluctant to draw the distinction that SLF
RF waves propagate ( meaning
you
can hear them < usually > great distances away
) and magnetic waves don't
because I think magnetic waves are
long, thin, ribbons of energy
that may extend
for many hundreds of
miles. If you contacted this ribbon anywhere it
exists then in
a manor of speaking , it propagates too. The issue becomes more
complex when you
consider
the nature of " crossover
SLF waves " which exhibit some
characteristics of
both magnetic waves and
SLF RF waves. Mobile
Magnetic Waves are quite clearly
"
magnetic " in nature . They must
be detected with a magnetometer or " moving "
AC gauss
meter. if you stand in direct contact with one , they do not register or
barely
register on SLF
receiving equipment. the only reason they " barely " register is that
they are constantly in motion
and that motion makes them somewhat
detectable as
their field cuts the SLF sensor / antenna.
When recorded in a spectral display
program , such as Spectrum Lab
freeware and using the VCO /
Gauss Master device
they show the large
powerful " amplitude " spectral oscillator line ,
but have
no other
spectral characteristics due to the fact they are like a pure DC
wave and impart NO
low-ac
spectral modulations . All SLF " ac " RF signals displayed,
using a vco to
display
the low frequency signal , shown as a modulation on the initial vco
( amplitude ) oscillator signal (
when you get the " amplitude " display , look
for the
superimposed ac modulation on the spectral
display ) .
Mobile Magnetic Waves seem very powerful.
as they can be
detected with an
unmodified Gauss
Master, in your car , while " driving " down the
road ( it has to be in
motion
to find them ) . They are about the same strength ( indicated on a Gauss
Master
as the highest
pitched VCO tone ) as driving under huge AC power transmission lines.
The unmodified Gauss Master maxes out at 10
milligauss and Mobile Magnetic Waves
can often max out the meter
. " Single " mobile
magnetic waves have exceptions to
the
above description as shown immediately
below.
" Single/s " ...
Mobile magnetic Waves .........
These magnetic waves can
be found with SLF detection
equipment and the Gauss
Master both while
sitting still ( the Gauss Master not moving ) or while
driving down
the street. When sitting in one place , using portable ULF
receiving equipment , they
will wash over you with a flourish.
In a Gauss Master they make a
powerful " Blip " sound. I
have found them often,
and in about any
location or terrain , they seem plentiful. In
spectrum recording
equipment , using the VCO interface
, they show a powerful, swooping ,
" amplitude " vco spectral display but have
absolutely NO
superimposed
ac wave form modulation of the vco. they
are pure DC looking,
in other words.
You can drive through one at high
speeds and then slow down and wait
and
( if you are lucky ) it will wash over you again. Then you can
speed up and drive
through it
and find it again. You can set up two Gauss Masters , spaced about 25 '
distant in a portable equipment
configuration , and ( if you happen to have them
situated in the proper directions )
hear the wave " blip " in one Gauss Master speaker
and then hear it again
as it hits the 2nd Gauss Master a little distance
away. You must
be moving quite fast ( 25 - 35 mph
at least ) to keep up with these waves as they are quite
speedy.
This .wav file is what they sound like on a vco ( Gauss Master )
interface and
the Spectrum
Lab spectrogram below is what they look like visually displayed.

When using a VCO( Gauss Master )
interface to detect these
" Single Waves ,
one must take care not to confuse them
with " some " static noise
spikes which
have a similar sound.
They sound distinctively different with a little
practice. You
should use a
parallel "
audio amp
" / " Gauss Master " set up
, at first to
help train you to the differences in
the sounds. On a spectrogram
the differences
are quite obvious.
Learning to use a VCO
interface to find these many
types of phenomena , has
some advantages over not
using one. First , just using a receiver and
a laptop ,
mobile , just to record the
waves has it's limitations. while driving down the street
, a laptop can be an undesirable distraction. Secondly , one would
have no way of
knowing
that you have contacted this wave, while driving down the street , unless
you have some ( hands
free, eyes free ) method of doing so. The standard SLF receiver
( into a laptop
) has no way of alerting you to their presence.
The VCO
interface , besides offering
solutions for equipment
performance issues ,
offers the ideal
methodology for mobile users due to it handy audio speaker
output
device. The VCO interface
, into the spectrum display computer, also offers
the
ideal methodology to distinguish between RF SLF phenomena and DC magnetic
phenomena due to
it's ability to clearly display the " pure DC " nature of the
displayed wave (
lack of a superimposed ac modulation ) .
Also , an alternative method such as
just recording the captured wave
sounds from a
Gauss Master audio
output into a small ( shirt pocket ) digital
dictation recorder
( using it's built in memory for storage ) and playing it
back for analysis ,
later on, is
very desirable and eliminates having to have a cumbersome laptop with you all the
time.
You can
play back the recorded wave sounds into your laptop's sound card at a later
time or run the sound
file through the spectral
analysis on your home computer
eliminating the need for a laptop present in
the field with you. The small solid state
dictation recorder should be
set to it's highest fidelity setting to
preserve the audio wave
form in it's most accurate state. This will usually reduce the overall
recording time
available on
your recorder but that isn't usually an issue as waves are relatively short and
many can be captured and
stored with minimal memory space requirements. Using the
' VOX " setting on your recorder can help
minimize memory usage too, providing the
recorder you are using doesn't cut off
the initial part of the
captured wave due to slow
VOX response timing.
" Complex " ....... Mobile
Magnetic Waves
I
have
saved the best for last. I consider this type of Mobile Magnetic
Wave to be the
most
interesting and exciting discovery. It's rare and unusual
properties make it
intriguing and mysterious. This is the first mobile magnetic wave
I discovered
( quite accidentally
) and started my whole hobby of " mobile
" ULF discovery
and wave hunting . Because of this
particular discovery, I learned that there are
" wave types " that ( seemingly ) can only be found
by
virtue of being mobile or
portable.
" Some " types of waves either never actually
show up at large , home ,
receiving
locations or are so rare that " chance " home
discovery seldom or never happens.
Another factor is
likely that WAVE
hobbyist aren't actually looking for this type of
wave and , when discovered ,
dismiss it as an " unexplained " SLF
ac phenomena
( because they can't move around and discover
more about them ). I suspect that
if the ULF hobbyist
were alerted to these types of waves and took
measures to
identify
them, that entire new wave types would start to be
discovered and reported upon and
that , all
( ULF - SLF hobbyist ) would benefit through discovery
and reporting.
The potential for
revelations , through discovery associated with these waves
, exists
that might add huge amounts of additional knowledge and
insight to
natural and
manmade world phenomena . Are these waves "
paranormal " phenomena
, " Alien "
communications, engine signatures of " UFO " maglev
craft or
generated by secret " Government " underground
projects as
some people will
suggest ? At this time , we simply just don't
know ! Not enough is known about
the nature and
sources of these waves to make those kinds of deductions.
Certainly , until we discover additional knowledge about them
, we should keep
an open mind about them and consider all possibilities !
" Complex " waves have unusual and distinct sounds on a (
in
motion ) VCO detector.
So far, each and every one of them have a unique
composition /
wave sound ,
making them individually distinguishable , one from the
other. Like single/s waves
they are VERY
powerful , at least as strong as overhead ac power distribution
lines,
when contacted with the Gauss Master.
Their " woooop wooup wop woooop " is very
unusual sounding and immediately alert a person to
their presence. Unlike single/s
waves ,
" complex " waves move quite slowly , only a few feet per
second at most.
You can drive through one , turn around down the road
and drive back through it
again the
other direction, then
you can usually repeat the process , with the wave being
only a few hundred feet ( or less ) more distant or
closer , each pass, depending
upon the direction you contact it from. Additionally and
most interesting ,
these
" complex " waves are quite distinctive in
their composition.
If you drive through one
, as above , and get a " woooop wooup wop woooop "
sound from the vco, when you turn around and drive through
it
back the opposite
direction , it sounds " exactly " backward
" , woooop wop wooup woooop " . when
you turn and drive through
it
in the original direction, it repeats the original
pattern
of
sounds.
More than one " complex " wave might be found
in the same area
location or vicinity,
sometimes only a 1/4 of a mile
distant , sometimes a mile or
two distant.
Each and every " complex " wave that I have found ( and
there have been
100s of
them ) has had a different and unique pattern of "
wooop woooup " sounds.
If you stop
in the middle of a " complex " wave and hold a Gauss
Master still, the
wave seems to magically disappear. This is
because they are " magnetic " in nature
and you must wave the detector in the air so the
sensor can " cut " the magnetic wave
, to locate them. If you wave a Gauss Master inside a "
complex " wave
you
contact only a couple of the wave forms at a time when doing it
by hand. They seem
to have a certain
" width " , or said in another way, the total
combination of the
waves causing the " woooups
" seemingly has dimension or thickness.
When driving down a road and contacting the
waves , considering your speed and
when you hear the sharply defined first
wooop and the last wooop,
you get the
impression they
are about 2 to 3 feet thick.
Also, since you hear those numerous blips or " wooop
wooop " sounds , they seem
to be
composed of a layered or multi plied series of
closely spaced
individual waves .
This part
is hard to actually describe , because they may well
consist of some
multi-layered series of waves
or some unusual
series of twisted waveforms or even
something not even related to this description. In this respect
they remain quite mysterious.
If you stop and quickly deploy a portable SLF
receiving sensor and recorder, the
" complex " waves generally don't show on a spectral
display or sound off a
Gauss
Master because they are moving so slowly.
You can wave a Gauss Master in the air and hear parts of one slowly
pass over
and it won't
register on a spectrum display. A person would need some
kind of
geomagnetic detection
and recording equipment to make a more detailed study of
the nature of these waves and
capture them for spectral analysis while sitting in just one place (
providing you are
fortunate
enough to have it actually come your way and pass over you !
)
Recording magnetometers and
similar equipment
would be required in this case.
There seems to be a single wave related study posted
on the web at this location.
It's interesting that the author of this study
eventually concludes that these magnetic
wave
are quite surprisingly " manmade " and not geomagnetic or
natural phenomena.
This conclusion lends it's self well
to those that claim possible paranormal , alien, UFO
or Government sources for these waves.
Using the
Gauss
Master vco setup , one can capture and display
the waveforms on the spectral display and see the
multi peaked amplitude vco waves
and see that there are NO superimposed ac modulated waveforms.
This clearly
indicates
that these waves have typical DC ( magnetic )
characteristics and are not SLF / AC in
nature. Anyone
can buy an inexpensive Gauss
Master , ( $39 or less on ebay
or web paranormal
sales sites found in Google
) and place it in their car or truck
and drive around looking for mobile magnetic
waves as they
drive . If you do get a
Gauss Master ( or any of the other portable EMF meters
found on ebay or the web )
you
should think of , at least , changing
the Gauss
Master power switch to keep it
turned on ( to reduce having to
reactivate it every time it times out , causing you to miss
potential waves ) and even
adding the audio
output modification to allow a person to
use a small
digital recorder or micro cassette tape recorder to
document the waves
as you
find them, and for storage and
possible analysis
at a later time.
spectrogram of a multi blip mobile magnetic wave .....

What these waves are, and what their source is
, is
both intriguing and a
mystery. It's easy to conclude they are some , previously
unknown,
geomagnetic
phenomena or some kind of " aurora like "
natural phenomena.
It's also not
hard to conclude they are disturbances of the earth's magnetic
field or vortexes
caused by
forces deep inside the earth's crust. It's not hard for me
to think they
are
caused by some kind of Teutonic plate action or huge
pressure from miles high
piles of granite called mountains, as I have only found the "
complex " wave
phenomena in high
mountainous
areas ( in the nearby Sierra Nevada mountains )
or in the east side of the
smallish California
Coastal mountain range.
It appears that Paranormalist and Ghost Hunters have
also discovered these waves
, from time to time ( the Gauss Master is sold on paranormal and
ghost hunter
sites )
and attributed them to " lost souls " or wandering " ghosts " .
Alien and UFO
hobbyist ,
that I know , say they are UFO communications signals or
landing pattern
beacons .
Government conspiracy types think they are products
of deep mountain
tunneling
equipment or signals
from secret experimental government tests. I personally
don't know what they are but before
I'd laugh off or outwardly dismiss
" any " of these explanations , I'd remember first that I
only find them up in the
high mountain highways.
I " never " seem to find them in ANY populated
location ( how is THAT possible ? ) .
Each has a unique and separate identity , and generally
they are very rare and
hard to locate. All that , and the only related scientific
study known to exist on the web
( as I write this ) concludes they are " manmade " in nature. I
hope that lots of
curious and interested people of all types ( ULF - SLF , UFO,
conspiracy, ghost /
paranormal etc. hobbyist ) will read the content on this
site and be encouraged to go
out
and find these waves themselves.
they might even discover MANY more new unknown types in the process.
Perhaps they will
help discover much and unlock the mystery associated with these
waves. ( you might even
find a " source" of them nearby to your
particular location )
Please check out my section on "
Crossover " waves
for some information and insight
on what portable / mobile wave hunting can reveal
about
mobile SLF ac waves.