but what if its coming from the sky,as in,something wrong with the
planet or magnetic field???????????no one seems to think this is
possible,but nasa is finding a lot of strange things up
there???????????

On Nov 25, 3:39 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> This from the Hum Forum...................mirrors my observations of
> the Hum, when it's on that is........
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> I'm conflicted on the issue of Radio Interference being the cause of
> the HUM, yet the incident that I had the other evening is more
> difficult to explain from a strictly acoustic effect. I was sitting on
> the couch, remote in hand, watching the movie "Prestige" largely in
> Fast Forward mode. I like some of the meandering music used in the
> movie and was indexing the DVD to sections that contained a decent
> amount of the music. (Incidentally,
>
> During one of the pauses in sound that occurred (from me hitting FF)
> when the volume was muted, and I was almost struck dumb by the volume
> of the HUM that became evident. It was so loud I was concerned and
> missed the opportunity to hold my ears to see if I still perceived it
> as loud. It did not last long, a few minutes, and my wife could hear
> it as well, sitting within a few feet of me. It subsided within
> minutes into the level that we are accustomed to hearing when the HUM
> is present. Radio interference would be a handier method of explaining
> this outburst, as the onset and decay were so sudden.
>
> Anyway, I also cannot wait to return to the NRQZ. It will be an
> interesting adventure.
>
> I found some points on the HUM, properly attributed.  I have no idea
> how accurate they are, but they are talking points for the forum. I
> would encourage others to comment on various aspects of the following.
>
> Be well.
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> SOME NOTES                                         William Beaty 1997
>
> If the "Hum" is tinnitus (and arises in the brains of affected
> individuals), then why do these individuals note the disappearance of
> the
> hum when travelling to some (but not all) other states, or to other
> countries, only to find that it immediately reappears when they
> return?
>
> If the "Hum" is caused by microwave beams, why does a faraday cage
> have no
> effect on the perceived intensity?
>
> If the "Hum" is acoustic, and hum-sensitive individuals sim
> ply have an
> extended low-freq hearing cutoff, then why do microphone measurements
> show
> no spectrum peaks?  (note: A.H. does find spectrum peaks in Denmark
> hum.
> But U. of NM finds none in the Taos NM area.)
>
> If the "Hum" is acoustic, why do some hum-sensitive individuals turn
> out
> *not* to have extended low-freq hearing sensitivity?  There is one
> report
> of a hearing-disabled person who suffers from the Hum.
>
> If the hum is acoustic, then a thick-walled chamber, such as a
> pressure
> chamber, should shield it.  No reports of this having been tried.
>
> If the "Hum" is from local industrial sources, why does it continue
> even
> during long term, wide-area power blackouts?
>
> If the "Hum" is from tornadoes, weather, aircraft, street sweepers,
> etc.,
> why does it usually continue unceasingly for years?  Sources of
> transient
> hums cannot be used to explain a continuing hum.
>
> If the "Hum" has a geologic source, what is the mechanism which
> converts
> underground stresses or movements into a continuous signal around 60hz
> -
> 80hz?  And why don't microphones pick it up?
>
> If the "Hum" is caused by human electromagnetic perception of ELF
> waves,
> then hum-sensitive individuals should also be able to hear the
> magnetic
> field around a 60Hz-powered coil.  They should perceive power
> transformers
> as being loud hum sources, or if the perception is nonlinear, then the
> more powerful field should swamp out the normal "Hum" they hear.
>
> If the "Hum" is caused by human electromagnetic perception, then why
> did
> the U. of NM people find no anomalous signals between 10Hz and
> 1000MHz?
> (Note: at VLF frequencies the E and the M components might be
> separate.  A
> coil-based antenna might not detect electrostatic vibration, and a
> capacitor-based antenna might not detect magnetic vibration.)
>
> If the Hum is low frequency electromagnetism, then it should be easy
> to
> prove:  build a simple hum-transmitter, such as a signal generator, a
> power amplifier, and a coi
> l.  Encapsulate the coil to limit audio
> vibration but pass magnetism.  If hum-sensitive people can hear the
> signal
> from the coil, but non-hearers cannot, then this would be strong
> indirect
> evidence for an EM source.
>
> Hum-hearers report that ear plugs work temporarily, but soon the Hum
> is
> heard again even with plugs.
>
> One person reports that use of just one earplug can give some relief.
>
> The hum commonly causes marital strife, since usually only one partner
> can
> hear it and the other cannot.
>
> Women report problems with the hum more often than men.
>
> The hum is perceived as louder indoors than outside.
>
> The hum seems louder a few feet from a wall, but seems less loud at
> the
> wall's surface.
>
> If the hum is electromagnetic, then a magnetic shield room with thick
> iron
> walls should shield it.  No reports of this having been tried.  If EM,
> then a negative feedback coil system might cancel the signal and
> thereby
> act as a shield.
>
> Micheal Theroux hum article in Borderlands magazine.  Detector:
> suction-cup telephone pickup coil with NIB magnets on either side,
> placed
> in the center of a long piece of plastic sewer pipe.
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