Post by NCSS Fox on Nov 13, 2005 11:55:44 GMT -5
No, not the movie... But same general idea.
Voices from beyond can easily be recorded using a regular cassette tape recorder with an external microphone. The discovery was made in 1959 by Friederich Jurgenson, a Sweedish researcher, and it started a wave if interest in this field. Jurgenson was using a common tape recorder to record bird songs when he discovered mysterious voices in the recordings. Mixed with the backgorund sound, the wind shaking the leaves in the trees, it was possible to hear the conversations of people who were not visible in the place where the recordings weree made. After Jurgenson's discovery, many other researchers began to experiment, trying to pick up voices from beyond. The most important of these researchers was Dr. Konstantine Raudive. He died in 1974 but left a number of works aimed at convincing humans that contact between the dead and the living is possible. Dr. Raudive applied the principal of stochastic resonance to his research. The basic idea is that background noise acts as a carrier and can be modulated by any other signals present in free space. Without background noise, these signals, (voices of the dead), are too weak to be detectable, but in the presence of a noise (white noise) their levels increase beyond the threashold of detection and become clear...sometimes even loud. White noise can also be describes as a signal with no definite frequency.
Ok, but how can i use this??
White noise when played while doing an evp recording will provide the "paper" for your contacts to write on. Giving you better results and filtering out annying background noises like the resonance of the recorders motor (if mechnical) or other devices you may have with you.
Great... Where do i get it??
There is a cd avaiable here, theghosthunterstore.com/and there are several programs that can generate the sound and save it as a wave file to be written to a cd yourself, or played from a laptop...etc
Voices from beyond can easily be recorded using a regular cassette tape recorder with an external microphone. The discovery was made in 1959 by Friederich Jurgenson, a Sweedish researcher, and it started a wave if interest in this field. Jurgenson was using a common tape recorder to record bird songs when he discovered mysterious voices in the recordings. Mixed with the backgorund sound, the wind shaking the leaves in the trees, it was possible to hear the conversations of people who were not visible in the place where the recordings weree made. After Jurgenson's discovery, many other researchers began to experiment, trying to pick up voices from beyond. The most important of these researchers was Dr. Konstantine Raudive. He died in 1974 but left a number of works aimed at convincing humans that contact between the dead and the living is possible. Dr. Raudive applied the principal of stochastic resonance to his research. The basic idea is that background noise acts as a carrier and can be modulated by any other signals present in free space. Without background noise, these signals, (voices of the dead), are too weak to be detectable, but in the presence of a noise (white noise) their levels increase beyond the threashold of detection and become clear...sometimes even loud. White noise can also be describes as a signal with no definite frequency.
Ok, but how can i use this??
White noise when played while doing an evp recording will provide the "paper" for your contacts to write on. Giving you better results and filtering out annying background noises like the resonance of the recorders motor (if mechnical) or other devices you may have with you.
Great... Where do i get it??
There is a cd avaiable here, theghosthunterstore.com/and there are several programs that can generate the sound and save it as a wave file to be written to a cd yourself, or played from a laptop...etc