Infrasound
- Vick Tandy
Computer
specialist Vick Tandy from Coventry University always considered all legends
about ghosts a nonsense and never took them seriously. Once he traditionally
spent his evening working in a laboratory when he suddenly broke into
a cold sweat. Vick felt somebody was watching him with sinister eyes.
Then the sinister something assumed a gray material form, crossed the
room and approached the scientist. In the vague outline Vick could discern
legs, arms and fog where the figure must have a head; there was a dark
spot in the center of the fog which might be a mouth. In an instance,
the vision disappeared in the air without leaving a trace.
As soon as Vick Tandy recovered after the first fear and shock he started
doing as a scientist: he started looking for the cause of the unusual
phenomenon. Hallucinations might have been the easiest way to explain
the phenomenon. On the other hand, Vick didn't use drugs, was moderate
in drinking alcohol and coffee. As for weird forces, the scientist strongly
disregarded them. So, Vick Tandy decided to look for ordinary physical
factors that might explain the phenomenon.
Soon Vick Tandy managed to discover the factors quite accidentally. Vick's
hobby, fencing helped him with it. Some time after the scientist saw the
"ghost" he brought his rapier to the laboratory to set it right
before a forthcoming fencing tournament. Suddenly Vick felt the blade
gripped in a vice started vibrating more and more as if some invisible
hand touched it.
"Some invisible hand" might have been suggested as a probable
explanation of the phenomenon by ordinary people but not by a scientist.
That is why Vick Tandy suddenly arrived at a conclusion that the moving
of the blade was resonance oscillations caused with sound waves. This
is just exactly the same when we hear tea services clink in a buffet when
music is thundering in the room. But in fact, it was actually very quiet
in the laboratory. To be sure, Vick Tandy measured the sound in the laboratory
with special apparatuses. He was surprised to see that the sound in the
room was unimaginable; the sound waves were very low, although the scientist
couldn't hear them. That was infrasound. It took the scientist a lot of
time to find out the source of the infrasound; it was emitted by a recently
set ventilator in the air conditioner. As soon as the air conditioner
was switched off, the blade stopped vibrating.
Infrasound is very surprising by itself. For many years seamen were pondering
over the mystery of "flying Dutchmen", ships that wandered around
the seas without crews on board. The ships were in good repair, but there
were no people on board at all. Where have they gone? Well-known vessel
Mary Celeste was the last of such ships; that was a wonderful schooner
noticed by some other vessel in the ocean. When the vessel approached
Mary Celeste and its seamen entered the schooner, they were astonished
to find hot dinner and entries recently made by the captain in the ship
journal. There were absolutely no people on board of Mary Celeste. They
disappeared but no traces could be found.
The mystery was unsolved for decades, until it became clear that infrasound
was the explanation of the phenomenon. As it turned out, infrasound of
seven hertz emitted by ocean waves under some definite conditions was
the reason of it. But infrasound of seven hertz is terrible for people:
they may go mad and throw themselves overboard to save their lives.
Vick Tandy supposed that his night vision might be connected with infrasound
as well. When he measured the infrasound in the laboratory, the showing
was 18.98 hertz, just exactly the frequency under which a human eyeball
starts resonating. So, to all appearances sound waves made Vick Tandy's
eyeballs resonate and produced an optical illusion: he saw a figure that
didn't exist in fact.
Further investigation of the phenomenon revealed that sound waves of this
low frequency may appear rather frequently under natural conditions. Infrasound
arises when strong gusts of wind clash with chimneys or towers. These
heavy basses penetrate even through very thick walls. Such sound waves
start rumbling in tunnel-shaped corridors. This is the reason why people
often come across ghosts in long serpentine corridors of ancient castles
looking like tunnels. Strong winds are quite typical of Great Britain.
Vick Tandy published the results of his research in the magazine of the
Society of Physical Researches. The Society was formed in 1822 to unite
British parapsychologists and naturalists; the Society is working to find
reasonable explanations to paranormal phenomena. This is quite understandable
that professional "ghost busters" got enthusiastic with Tandy's
idea. Leading parapsychologists of Great Britain think this idea will
help give explanations to many of mysterious phenomena.
However, other scientists call the idea into question. Physicists studying
effect of infrasound upon the human body say that volunteers participating
in their experiments complain of weariness, high pressure in the eyes
and in the ears, but never mention hallucinations or ghosts. At that,
physicists say that drivers also have no optical illusions when cars overcome
the air drag at a really high speed and the level of infrasound waves
is very high.
Courtesy
of Monstrous.com
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