Muons: A New Potential Psychotronic Carrier
A new particle size carrier is now to be seriously considered as a potential psychotronic carrier.
Like previously discussed Neutrinos, Muons are small enough to allows very hight resolution, that is at the neurotransmitters level. Moreover, there are equally ground and metal penetrating.
Finally, the newly commissioned nuclear attack submarine USS Jimmy Carter (SSN23) is known to be able to tap undersea cables and eavesdrop on the communications passing through them. Psychotronic technologies must not be excluded !
Below is an excerpt from Spacewar.com:
In the late 1960s, Luis Alvarez, a Nobel physics laureate from the University of California, Berkeley placed muon detectors in a tunnel beneath the Great Pyramid of Chefren in Egypt in search of hidden burial chambers. None were discovered.
Closer to home, scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico have been exploring the use of muon radiography to detect illicit nuclear materials in cargo containers or trucks. Existing X-ray devices, already being deployed at ports and border crossings, cannot readily detect a well-shielded cache of highly enriched uranium, material that could be used in a devastating nuclear bomb.
Newer scanning methods, using either dual-beam X-rays or neutrons, can pose radiation hazards to security personnel or illegal immigrants who might stow away in a container.
Related Link:
Muon Opportunists: Detecting The Unseen With Natural Probes.
http://www.spacewar.com/news/terrorwar-05i.html
Informant: colonel_yuri
Like previously discussed Neutrinos, Muons are small enough to allows very hight resolution, that is at the neurotransmitters level. Moreover, there are equally ground and metal penetrating.
Finally, the newly commissioned nuclear attack submarine USS Jimmy Carter (SSN23) is known to be able to tap undersea cables and eavesdrop on the communications passing through them. Psychotronic technologies must not be excluded !
Below is an excerpt from Spacewar.com:
In the late 1960s, Luis Alvarez, a Nobel physics laureate from the University of California, Berkeley placed muon detectors in a tunnel beneath the Great Pyramid of Chefren in Egypt in search of hidden burial chambers. None were discovered.
Closer to home, scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico have been exploring the use of muon radiography to detect illicit nuclear materials in cargo containers or trucks. Existing X-ray devices, already being deployed at ports and border crossings, cannot readily detect a well-shielded cache of highly enriched uranium, material that could be used in a devastating nuclear bomb.
Newer scanning methods, using either dual-beam X-rays or neutrons, can pose radiation hazards to security personnel or illegal immigrants who might stow away in a container.
Related Link:
Muon Opportunists: Detecting The Unseen With Natural Probes.
http://www.spacewar.com/news/terrorwar-05i.html
Informant: colonel_yuri
Omega - 24. Feb, 15:11