Ghosts created by low frequency
sounds
http://www.noveltynet.org/content/paranormal/www.parascope.com/articles/slips/fs30_2.htm
Our story begins at a medical manufacturing facility in the midlands
of Great Britain. Vic Tandy, an engineer from Coventry University,
was doing research in a laboratory at the company. Tandy is an
expert in computer-assisted learning (and coincidentally, if I'm
not mistaken, I think the "Vic Tandy" might have been
an old TRS-80 model they used to sell at Radio Shack). Workers
at the lab told Tandy that the building was haunted, but being
a reasoning man of science, he didn't believe them. At least, not
at first.
Late one night, when Tandy was burning the midnight oil all alone
at the laboratory, he had a face-to-face encounter with the unexplained.
As he sat at his desk working in the silent, desolate building,
a gnawing unease began to overtake him. Although he couldn't put
his finger on anything out of the ordinary, something was not right.
"I was sweating but cold and the feeling of depression was
noticeable -- but there was also something else. It was as though
something was in the room with me," Tandy said. "Then
I became aware that I was being watched, and a figure slowly emerged
to my left. It was indistinct and on the periphery of my vision,
but it moved just as I would expect a person to. It was gray, and
made no sound. The hair was standing up on the back of my neck
-- I was terrified."
Tandy steeled himself and turned to face the ghostly shape dead-on,
but he said it immediately faded and completely disappeared. Concerned
that his mind must be playing tricks on him, Tandy packed up and
went home. But in the great tradition of haunted house encounters,
he didn't flee from the ghost-ridden building and swear never to
return -- no sir, he came right back for more. And he got it.
The morning after his weird sighting, Tandy took a break at the
lab to spend some time on a hobby of his, namely the sport of fencing.
He clamped a fencing foil in a vise so that he could make some
adjustments on it, perhaps subconsciously thinking he might need
the sword to fight off any unruly ghosts. Tandy briefly left the
room, and then returned to see a phenomenal sight. The tip of the
foil was vibrating intensely and continuously, for no apparent
reason.
The average person might have freaked out and concluded that the
poltergeists were trying to go on a foil-whacking spree upside
somebody's head. But not Vic Tandy, professional engineer. His
first thought was that there might be low frequency sound waves
coming from somewhere in the laboratory -- subsonic sounds that
can be seen (in the form of surrounding vibrations) but not heard.
One of the perks of being a scientist is that you can usually
get ahold of big-time scientific equipment any time you have a
crazy hunch about something, and so Tandy was able to test out
the laboratory's sound wave properties. His hypothesis was correct:
there was a "standing wave" acoustically stuck inside
walls of the lab, an infrasound wave vibrating at about 19 cycles
per second. The sound waves, which just happened to hit top intensity
at a spot right beside Tandy's desk, were being generated by a
recently installed extraction fan.
"When the fan's mounting was altered, the ghost left with
the standing wave," Tandy said. And that, surely, was the
most hum-drum exorcism ever performed in history. But there's a
deeper significance to Tandy's discovery than knowing when to tighten
some loose bolts. Tandy believes that the low frequency sound also
caused his late-night spectral visitation: the cold chills, the
sense of paranoia and distress, the hallucinatory figure glimpsed
creeping in the shadows. In short, infrasound waves could could
be a multi-purpose explanation for most of the commonly reported
occurrences in suspected hauntings.
Research has previously proven that exposure to low frequency
sound can cause a variety of physiological effects, many of them
adverse ones, such as shivering, anxiety and breathlessness. These
responses can lead a person to think that some unseen danger is
imminent, or feel like he is being watched. Infrasound might even
cause hallucinations. Tests at NASA have shown that the human eyeball
has a resonant frequency of 18 cycles a second, and will vibrate
in sympathy with infrasound waves that have a similar frequency.
Under these conditions, there would be a "smearing of vision" that
is capable of making someone see evanescent hallucinations in the
periphery of their visual field. This effect is reminiscent of
the theories of neurologist Michael Persinger, who has suggested
that electromagnetic waves can interfere with brain activity and
lead people to think they see ghosts or aliens.
To back up his personal observations, Tandy has investigated other
sites of reported hauntings, and he claims to have found two more
in which infrasound may account for the "presence" of
ghosts. One was a building where a wind tunnel in the basement
was running during the sighting. Of course, the classical haunted
house is an old abandoned mansion without so much as electrical
wiring, let alone heavy industrial equipment. But infrasound can
still be generated without power -- a standing wave could be caused
by wind blowing past a cracked window in a long, narrow corridor,
which sounds like a suitably creepy setting. This type of low-frequency
sound generation is similar in principle to the deep tooting sound
a glass bottle makes when you blow across the top of it.
So it just might be that subsonic sound waves have put the spook
in a lot of traditionally spooky places. And what's more, in some
cases it may have even been put there on purpose. Archaeologists
have discovered that a number of Neolithic tombs in England and
Ireland were seemingly constructed so as to make sounds bounce
off walls with the intentional effect of being, well, scary. The
tombs uniformly create this acoustic environment through the familiar
recipe of a long, narrow entryway with an opening to the outside
at one end. The ancient architects of these tombs may not have
understood infrasound frequencies and Helmholtz resonance, but
spookiness was a desirable feature for a tomb, for the purpose
of instilling reverence for the dead and discouraging grave-robbers.
Through trial and error, they might have struck upon the most sonically
foreboding design possible, and stuck with it.
All in all, the Tandy theory of infrasound hauntings is a nifty
notion that's tailor-made for Scully to fling at Mulder's next
phantom menace. But never fear: the true-believing ghost-hunters
of the world will remain undaunted by science's latest whiz in
their cornflakes. At the very least, the faithful will knowingly
explain that real ghosts produce subsonic sounds, thereby hijacking
all the salient facts over to their side of the argument. Or they
could just pretend that this whole discovery resonates at an ultra
low frequency, and never hear a word of it.
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