I knew this guy would stir some Nikola Tesla reference into this witches brew at some point. The problem is that if physicists can measure the atmospheric temperature above an earthquake zone, they can certainly detect a massive burst of microwave radiation. So, where's the beef, as they used to say?
As you can see, the video completely neglects to address the article's explanation for the ionosphere heating phenomenon (radioactive emissions from the release of trapped radon gas).
And here is a more recent article from 2020 which shows that the heating phenomenon lasted for at least 10 hours AFTER the Japan quake, also including a valid explanation for why
I enjoy reading your posts, but this video is just nonsense. It's interesting, of course, to see what kinds of weird things people believe, but I wonder if the sort of brain damage it could cause outweighs whatever value it has.
2 comments:
I knew this guy would stir some Nikola Tesla reference into this witches brew at some point. The problem is that if physicists can measure the atmospheric temperature above an earthquake zone, they can certainly detect a massive burst of microwave radiation. So, where's the beef, as they used to say?
PS. Here is the 2011 article noted in the video:
https://www.technologyreview.com/2011/05/18/194634/atmosphere-above-japan-heated-rapidly-before-m9-earthquake/
As you can see, the video completely neglects to address the article's explanation for the ionosphere heating phenomenon (radioactive emissions from the release of trapped radon gas).
And here is a more recent article from 2020 which shows that the heating phenomenon lasted for at least 10 hours AFTER the Japan quake, also including a valid explanation for why
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/15427390
I enjoy reading your posts, but this video is just nonsense. It's interesting, of course, to see what kinds of weird things people believe, but I wonder if the sort of brain damage it could cause outweighs whatever value it has.
Post a Comment