Also microwaves can and do exist as both "sound" and electromagnetic. You are describing the medium (air vs. conductive wire), I was describing the frequency range.
Discussion
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Iām calling this one. Nobody in the whole world seriously uses the word microwave to refer to GHz sound. Iām gunna need a source that isnāt the note Iām replying to š
?? If you're not familiar with the frequency spectrum:
(I had to search for an infographic with colors and pictures because I figured it would help someone like you.)
#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=1565x975&blurhash=rAA%5DKe%7C%3DI%3BA%5BOqoIRkNdoy%7EVslWBWYS2bHRkWXoexbjFayWXS2bHWBoes.1NFvxX%24inlR%2Ba%7Bs.jb0zFxxZ-7r%5DRlj%3Focaf56NyofsmsVafkBocjt&x=54e4816c5dc1e3328bc0637aacb32b116764b790a48a9380394465a38b2dfdb0
Hahahaha
My š¶ļø in physics.
Just in case youāre serious, Iām sorry I thought you were trolling. Iām happy to explain more than just the below š«
That diagram is all about electromagnetic radiation, and so is every diagram or explainer section youāll find that is talking about microwave frequencies. While the same frequencies are probably technically possible in some materials, the term āmicrowavesā is not used in the context of the pressure driven oscillations of non-charged particles, itās strictly an electromagnetic concept. š«š«š«
I mean I could be wrong, but Iām gunna need at least one receipt. Iād zap ya though š„¹
So in your mind the frequency of radio waves, microwaves, infrared light, visible light, x-rays, ect. only exist as an electrical "signal" and don't travel through non-charged particles i.e. the air.
Have you been participating in these microwave trials by any chance?
I donāt know what you mean by microwave trials.
They exist as both waves of electrical field and magnetic field. They do travel through materials that allow them to pass through. This interaction depends on things like whether thereās an electron that has an orbital transition that matches the energy of the passing wave. But you can tell that they donāt need the molecules because they can go through vacuums, unlike physical vibrations like sound or ultrasound.
Capta real quick for me. Send me back the zap I just sent. š«
It's come full circle: Microwave trials. The guy in the video was talking about blasting people with an "ultrasonic transformer" (I assume he means a transducer not a transformer) and by ultrasonic I was guessing microwaves, probably not infrared light or higher.
I'm sure the participants don't have much to worry about as I don't think they will miss any grey matter this quack happens to fry with his contraption.
Also, no I'm not captca-ing those sats back to you. I'm not a robot, and I deserve some form of tuition for the schooling I just gave you.
Haha well I was looking over your history and decided youāre probably not a bot. For now that method usually works. The sats are yours š«
Ohhhh thatās where you got the idea of electromagnetism. Nah that usage of the word transformer has reference to AI, not electricity.
Again, nobody uses microwaves to refer to sound.
āTFUSā he defines early in the video and is the sound part (yes I know youāre gritting your teeth at the non-perceptive use of that word, but believe me itās standard parlance in physics)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8507972/
2:23 or so is where he brings in the AI with the concept of a āNeural Transformerā.
The video is techno-mumbo-jumbo though, so this stuff being confusing/opaque is THE key part, the active ingredient of his pitch haha.
š«
I'm glad we sorted all this out.. most productive thing I've done all day. Later buddy, I'm going to bed.