Carrier wave in Electrical Engineering. (kæriər weɪv) Word forms: (regular plural) carrier waves. (Electrical engineering: Communication) A carrier wave is the continuous electromagnetic radiation, of constant amplitude and frequency, that is given out by a transmitter. https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/carrier-wave
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“Michael, everyone is having tinnitis these days. I think it is all about the cell phones and wifi. .”
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Micael McNeil
Maybe they have made us more alert to them but the carrier waves are always going to mean the same things.It is just the people who have suffered them for a long time, will have just got used to not observing side effects with them.
How would Geo-physics help people they may be party to keeping in the dark? Nobody would have heard of MKUltra until recently if it was possible to still hide it. I have come to the conclusion Meteorology at least in England has been hiding everything about it for a century since Tesla.The Wiggins Storm Forecast, even told how the relationship worked with earthquakes and volcanoes -except the Wiggins never learned about them.
How could he, there were no seismographs back then not even meteorology as we understand it these days.