[meteorite-list] Fireballs and Electrophonic sounds
From: Tom aka James Knudson <knudson911_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Apr 22 10:17:46 2004 Message-ID: <003801c3c117$7a843880$fcc743d8_at_malcolm> Hello Elton, I have a question and figured the list might be interested as well. The telecommunications industry relies heavily on microwave radios. Would a fireball interfere with microwave radios? It would seem like there would be some sort of interference. Thanks, Tom Peregrineflier <>< Yea, that's right, The proudest member of the IMCA # 6168 ----- Original Message ----- From: E. L. Jones <jonee_at_epix.net> To: Michael Gallant <miga_at_metrocast.net> Cc: <meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Friday, December 12, 2003 3:28 PM Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Fireballs and Electrophonic sounds > Hello Mike, > Research on Electrophonic sounds related to fireballs is a work in > progress and the book is still on page one. There are many widely > placed reports and in Mongolia within the past 5-6 years a scientific > expedition was recording audio and captuerd the sound. > > Current (no pun intended) theory is that the plasma of the fireball > generates microwaves which travel at the speed of light, are absorbed by > water bearing vegitation, mineralized ground, or large metal > objects--that then resonate in a sonic frequency. > > Elton > > Michael Gallant wrote: > > >Hello List, > > > ><snip> > > > >I'm guessing but think this was a sizable mass at quite some distance > >that just skipped in then out. Over Boston maybe??? Have done some > >research but with little luck. Any "old people" ( high or not, I'm not > >particular) out there remember such an event? Point me towards a data > >base? > > > >Best wishes to all, > >Mike Gallant > > > > > ______________________________________________ > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com > http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > Received on Fri 12 Dec 2003 08:15:32 PM PST |
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