The Why Files: Operation Podcast - 530: DEEP DIVE: The Fear Frequency: Havana Syndrome & Sonic Attacks
Episode Date: February 14, 2024This podcast dives into the mysterious Havana Syndrome illness afflicting diplomats. We explore the strange world of infrasonic sound waves below the range of human hearing. These inaudible noises can... induce anxiety or even sickness in people. What causes these bizarre symptoms? We uncover a range of natural and artificial sound sources that emit these creepy frequencies. From wind turbines to weapons, the effects are unsettling. The story begins with a ghost hunt in a haunted lab. One scientist's quest to explain the paranormal leads to an unexpected discovery about sound. Tracing clues from here, things turn surreal as we enter the realm of acoustic specters and sonic warfare. Be prepared as we venture behind the veil of audible perception. Our journey reveals how sounds we can't hear still impact our minds and bodies in surprising ways. Havana Syndrome is just one mystery we'll attempt to demystify regarding the potent influence of creepy frequencies.
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Have you ever wondered what ghosts sound like?
In the early 1980s, Vic Tandy was working for Warwick Labs at Coventry University in the UK,
where he designed medical equipment.
The building Tandy worked in was old, dating back to the 14th century,
and there were rumors among the staff that it was haunted.
People who visited claimed to have experienced paranormal events.
Tandy figured these experiences were related to the constant sound of life support systems
and other medical equipment that were operating on site.
But one morning, Tandy arrived at the office early.
As the cleaning lady was leaving, Tandy noticed she looked terrified.
The equipment hadn't been turned on, but maybe the
sound of pressure hoses or a local stray cat spooked her. But as the day went on, Tandy noticed
other odd events. Several office workers complained of feeling strange. They all described the same
symptoms, anxiety, feeling depressed, cold shivers. That night, Tandy was working late when he also started to feel strange.
The hairs on the back of his neck stood up.
He broke into a cold sweat
and felt a sudden overwhelming sense of dread.
His heart started to race
and he had this very specific feeling
that he was being watched.
Then, out of the corner of his eye,
he caught a glimpse of a gray figure
drifting across the room.
He turned around. The figure was gone.
Terrified, Vic Tandy bolted from the lab and raced home.
After he calmed down, he vowed to find a logical scientific explanation for what happened.
And what he found might surprise you.
Vic Tandy got to his office the next day and started looking around for the ghost.
He didn't find one, but he had noticed something strange.
He was an avid fencer preparing for a fencing competition that weekend.
In his lab, he had a foil locked in a vice. If you aren't familiar with fencing, it's a style of sword fighting. A foil is a sword
with a very long, thin blade. Tandy had the blade of his sword locked in a vice to install a new
handle. He noticed the blade was vibrating quickly, even though nothing was touching it.
Tandy started searching for the cause of the vibration.
During his investigation, he struck up a
conversation with the building engineer.
The engineer told him a fan
was recently installed in the lab.
The fan was causing a sound wave
to bounce between the walls,
and the wave's intensity was focused
in the center of the room, which was
the location of the foil.
And the ghost he saw? Tandy calculated the frequency of the room, which was the location of the foil. And the ghost he saw?
Tandy calculated the frequency of the sound where he saw the ghost at about 19 hertz.
This frequency is important.
The range of human hearing starts at 20 hertz, so Tandy's fan wasn't audible.
It's what's known as infrasound.
But just because we can't hear it doesn't mean it can't affect us.
All material objects have a natural resonant frequency. If the object is exposed to a sound wave of this
frequency, it'll vibrate in response. This is called sympathetic resonance, and you can test
this. If you strike a key on a piano in one room, a piano in another room will resonate that same
note. This is also why running your finger
around the rim of a glass at just the right speed will produce sound. Now back to Tandy's lab. It
turns out that the human eye resonates at about 19 hertz. So what appeared to be a ghost was
actually Tandy's eye vibrating at the frequency of the fan. Since this frequency has an actual
physical effect on the body,
the sound was causing a sense of fear and anxiety
in employees in the area.
And Tandy said that when they switched off the fan,
it was like a huge weight was lifted.
In this case, the sound causing fear and anxiety was accidental.
But some animals can generate this sound naturally,
and they do it intentionally to cause fear.
Researchers have discovered that just before a tiger attacks, its roar contains frequencies at 18 hertz,
which disorients their prey long enough for the tiger to move in for the kill.
Just under 20 hertz has been called the fear frequency for how
it affects mammals. Lots of horror movies have used sounds at or just above the fear frequency
to make their films even scarier. In 1984, acoustic biologist Katie Payne was at the Washington Zoo.
She noticed that the Asian elephants appeared to be communicating, but there was very little
audible sound. She also noticed
strange unsettling vibrations in the area of the elephants. Katie and fellow researchers spent the
next week studying the herd and discovered that the unnerving vibrations were in the range of 15
to 35 hertz. They later discovered that elephants could transmit these low-tone noises across
distances up to six miles.
And if you've ever heard an alligator, it's like the cross between a lion and a power drill. This
is not a sound you'll soon forget. The alligator's roar can vary slightly depending on the animal's
size, but it's always right around 19 hertz. You might not think of
a giraffe as scary as a lion or an alligator, but their humming noise, usually heard at night,
contains frequencies just above 19 hertz, and sounds like noises used in horror movies. These are just the examples found in animals.
Volcanic eruptions, lightning, avalanches, waterfalls, and severe weather
all contain sound waves in the 18 to 19 hertz range.
And if we go lower than 18 hertz, things get much, much worse.
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You sailed beyond the horizon
in search of an island
scrubbed from every map.
You battled krakens
and navigated through storms.
Your spade struck the lid
of a long-lost treasure chest.
While you cooked a lasagna.
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The brown note is said to occur
at frequencies between 5 and 9
hertz. This is the hypothetical
range of sound that supposedly
causes humans to lose control of their bowels.
I say hypothetical because nobody's been able to actually prove it. Yet.
In 1974, New Scientist magazine published an article called The Colossophone Commemorated.
It described a 110-foot wide speaker used in Victorian England to play the national anthem. It was said that as
soon as the first note of the anthem played, the entire court became violently ill and lost control
of their bowels. In 2000, the TV show South Park featured the brown note in an episode called
Worldwide Recorder Concert. In the episode, the boys change recorder music to include the brown note with, well, the expected results.
No!
No! In 2006, musician Ben Folds threw diapers and chocolate syrup into his audience
while supposedly playing the brown note, although no actual accidents were mentioned.
But remind me to never go to one of his concerts.
And in 2005, the brown note was famously busted by Adam Savage on Mythbusters.
He surrounded himself with giant speakers and had the note pumped into his
body. Now, he didn't feel so great afterward, but his diapers stayed clean. But here's the thing
about that experiment. Air isn't a great conductor of sound, especially at low frequencies. But when
you're physically connected to the vibration, its effects are much more intense. The United States Space Program conducted
tests that transferred the brown note and other frequencies directly to subjects' bodies by having
them sit in vibrating chairs. Test frequencies range from 0.5 hertz to 40 hertz and power levels
of 160 decibels, and that's loud. For comparison, a lawnmower is 90 dB,
a chainsaw is about 130,
and a gunshot is 140.
So testing people at 160 decibels,
even if you can't technically hear the sound,
it's going to get results.
Test subjects experienced nausea,
hallucinations, difficulty breathing,
and involuntary motor
functions. Nobody officially crapped their pants, but this experiment is probably where the urban
myth came from. But you don't have to be an astronaut to get sick from sound. All you have to
do is live near a wind farm. In the summer of 2010, florist Sue Hobart noticed she suddenly developed headaches,
insomnia, dizziness, and ringing in her ears.
She was 57 years old.
She assumed she was starting to show signs of aging.
She also noticed when she would take a trip out of town, the symptoms would disappear.
Her symptoms all started around the same time in the summer,
the same time three wind turbines were installed very close to her home.
And Sue wasn't the only person to experience these negative effects.
Many, many people who live near large wind turbine farms report all kinds of issues,
ranging from difficulty concentrating to extreme stress to uncontrollable migraines.
In one instance, an air traffic controller almost caused a fatal plane crash because
he was experiencing insomnia caused by living near a wind farm.
But there have been about 20 studies done on wind farms, but they found no link between
the turbines and people getting sick.
But guess who conducted the studies?
Yep, the wind turbine companies.
Still, it's been proven that people who live and work near a lot of noise
experience higher levels of stress and have more cortisol in their blood
than people who live in quiet environments.
So if we know sound can be dangerous, could it be used as a weapon?
Well, it already has been.
You sailed beyond the horizon in search of an island scrubbed from every map.
You battled krakens and navigated through storms.
Your spade struck the lid of a long-lost treasure chest.
While you cooked a lasagna.
There's more to imagine when you listen.
Discover best-selling adventure stories on Audible.
The most dangerous frequencies to humans are at about 7 hertz.
This is the median alpha rhythm of the brain and the resonant frequency of many of the body's organs.
This means at high enough volume,
these sounds can directly affect the central nervous system.
This can cause panic, convulsions, vomiting,
and with long enough exposure, organ rupture and death.
One of the most well-known inventors of infrasonic weapons was a Russian-born French scientist named
Vladimir Gavreau. Gavreau became interested in sound research in
1957 when he was asked to cure an unknown illness that was
affecting people at a research plant in Marseille. Gavreau
tracked the problem to air conditioning units that were generating low-frequency
sound. When the units were turned off, the problem to air conditioning units that were generating low-frequency sound. When the units
were turned off, the problem suddenly disappeared. So Gavreau began experimenting with acoustics
to create a weapon for the French military. He developed a few prototypes which he tested on
himself and his team, and according to reports, one of the researchers died instantly. Gavreau
wrote that the man's internal organs mashed into an amorphous jelly caused by the vibrations.
Even if people at nearby labs were sick for hours,
they said every organ in their body was vibrating.
Hearts, lungs, stomachs, everything.
But using sound as a weapon is not a new concept.
The ancient Celts used an instrument called a karnix.
A karnix was a 12
foot long bronze tube bent at both ends. The top flared into a bell. When used in battle,
it created a harsh reverberating sound that created confusion. In Norse mythology, the
jala horn was used. It was said when the horn was blown, it could be heard all through the heavens
and the earth. Viking raid horns were crafted after this mythological horn and were used to intimidate
enemies.
The Bible tells the story of ram horns being used by the Israelites to bring down the walls
of Jericho.
And in ancient Egypt, sound may have been used not only as a weapon, but may have been
used to build the pyramids.
The construction of the Great Pyramids in Egypt has been a matter of fascination and debate for millennia.
In the 10th century, Arab historian Abul Hasan Ali al-Masudi
wrote a 30-volume book set known as Akbar al-Zaman, or The History of Time.
In it, al-Masudi wrote that the pyramids were created by placing a magic papyrus or paper
under each of the massive stones.
The stone would then be struck with a metal rod that would cause it to levitate and be
moved along a path for about 20 feet before settling again.
The process would be repeated until the stones were in place.
The Temple of Jupiter at Baalbek, Lebanon contains the three largest stone blocks ever used in a
man-made structure. Each block is estimated to weigh as much as 1,000 tons. As of today,
no industrial equipment exists that could lift one, no super crane, and certainly no number of people.
Yet somehow, the blocks are positioned together so precisely
that a sheet of paper can't fit between them.
Nearby is an even bigger stone.
It's known as Hajar al-Hibla,
and it's the largest piece of stone ever cut by humans.
It weighs 1,200 tons,
and it's estimated it would take 16,000 men to move it one inch,
and it would be a huge challenge for modern technology just to create it. And if we go to
the other side of the planet, on a remote plateau in Bolivia, 12,000 feet above sea level, there's
a monument called Puerto del Sol, or Gate of the Sun. This elaborately carved megalith is a single piece of stone that weighs 10 tons,
and some scientists think that it may not be in its original location.
And here's another.
Namadal is an archaeological site on the island of Pompeii in Micronesia.
It's been called the Machu Picchu of the Pacific.
It's the only ancient city ever built upon a coral reef.
The engineering of Namadal is so complex, nobody can figure out how it was built. The lost city dates back to around
200 BC, and it's made up of hundreds of stacked stone logs, each about 10 feet long and about
three feet in diameter. The logs, which are stacked kind of like firewood, create walls that are 40 feet high
and 18 feet thick. That's taller than a three-story building. Yet each stone log weighs about two and
a half tons. And the logs that make up the higher walls, they weigh as much as 50 tons each. And how
they were moved and lifted into position is absolutely baffling. The locals didn't have pulleys.
They didn't have levers.
They didn't even have access to metal.
This is Stone Age technology, so how did they do it?
Well, the locals tell stories about giants who flew great canoes in the sky
and used some kind of magic to levitate the logs into place.
These are structures from very different and diverse cultures from all over the world.
So what was their secret?
Well, these societies are so old that there's no record of how these buildings were constructed.
But in almost every culture where megaliths exist, a legend also exists that the huge
stones were moved by sound, either by striking with a rod to produce
acoustic resonance, or by instruments, or by simply chanting stones into position.
Okay, so sound frequencies below human hearing can be dangerous. But what about sound frequencies
above human hearing? Well, that's called ultrasound. And when your body's exposed to that,
it's very, very bad.
There are two ways that ultrasound damages the body. The first is that sound waves can actually
heat up human cells, which causes all kinds of problems from nerve damage to cellular death.
The other is something called cavitation.
When sound waves pass through an object, they rapidly push and pull on that object.
This is called compression and refraction.
When ultrasound causes human cells to cavitate, it creates bubbles in the tissue,
and this is exactly what happens to divers suffering from decompression sickness, also called the bends.
Effects of ultrasound increase with the amplitude or volume of the sound wave.
While skin can deflect 99.9% of ultrasonic sound waves, sensitive areas of the body like our ears do not have that same protection. A study conducted by the U.S. Air Force found that exposure to high-intensity ultrasound
can cause damage to the lungs and intestines.
It also has the ability to affect heart rate patterns
and even cause the heart rate to slow down to dangerous levels.
Ultrasound is such an effective weapon
that the U.S. Navy has used it to repel pirates.
So, the United States
has used sonic weapons against its enemies. But have the enemies of the U.S. used sonic
weapons to attack Americans? You bet they have. A strange illness has been afflicting American
intelligence officers and diplomats all over the world.
Last summer, the CIA reported that officers were experiencing symptoms while traveling to India.
Two U.S. officials working in Hanoi suffered unexplained health issues.
And recently, German officials confirmed that they are investigating an alleged sonic attack against the U.S. embassy in Berlin. The first cases of
this illness were reported by U.S. and Canadian embassy employees working in Havana, Cuba.
The illness became known as Havana Syndrome. So what does Havana Syndrome feel like? Well,
it's described as someone suddenly experiencing a broad range of symptoms like migraines,
anxiety, dizziness, lapses of memory, and difficulty
concentrating. Some people described it as feeling as if they were hit by a blast wave or a beam of
energy. In some cases, the symptoms were brief, but other people experienced such devastating effects
that they required hospitalization and long-term care. The first cases of Havana Syndrome were reported in 2016
when Canadian and American officials arrived in Cuba.
CIA officers stationed at the embassy there
reported feeling fatigue, nausea, and pressure headaches.
Brain scans showed tissue damage
that's normally seen in people with concussions
after being in a car accident.
The issue was so serious
that the Obama administration evacuated the embassy.
Since then, Havana syndrome has been reported by U.S. officials worldwide.
Cuba, China, Russia, Colombia, Uzbekistan, and even the United States.
Last year, two White House staff members experienced symptoms while working at the White House.
According to investigators, the illness could be the result of a sonic weapon or exposure to high-energy microwaves.
Another study by the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine
said that directed pulsed radio frequency energy could be responsible.
Many intelligence officers are quietly pointing the finger at Russia,
but no evidence has been made public yet.
And as of now, there's still no official explanation.
But the CIA and State Department have prioritized
getting to the root cause of Avada Syndrome.
Now, it's not surprising that governments would use these weapons on their enemies.
But governments would never use these weapons on their own citizens, would they?
In October 2000, the USS Cole was approached by a small boat. Before ship personnel realized what was happening, it was too late. The boat was loaded with explosives. The incident resulted
in numerous changes in naval policy and led to the creation of the LRAD.
LRAD stands for Long Range Acoustic Device.
These devices were initially created
to enhance long-distance communication between ships.
But government and law enforcement agencies
quickly realized the devices had another benefit,
crowd control.
LRAD devices work by emitting a highly directional beam of loud sound, up to 160 decibels.
Remember, that's louder than a gunshot.
This means LRAD is incredibly loud.
In 2014, the New York City police deployed LRADs against a crowd protesting the police killing of Eric Garner.
Officers deployed a deterrent tone 15 to 20 times within three minutes.
In 2018, people who were at the protest filed a lawsuit against the NYPD.
They claimed they'd suffered from migraines, sinus pain, dizziness, tinnitus, and hearing loss.
In 2019, the Chinese developed a sonic device shaped like a rifle, also used for crowd control.
It focuses waves of low-frequency sound to cause extreme discomfort.
It causes painful vibrations in eardrums, eyeballs, the stomach, liver, and the brain.
In England, LRAD devices known as mosquitoes are used as noise deterrents in areas to prevent loitering. Proponents of LRAD say this method of crowd control is less damaging than tear gas or non-lethal ammunition.
But critics say that LRADs are not a good alternative,
and the impact that sound has on the population could be a violation of human rights.
Whether these devices are used in communities or military applications,
the impact they can have on the human body is pretty clear.
Shows like South Park and Mythbusters take a more comedic look at the impact of sound, but the potential dangers should not be overlooked.
Many of the studies on sound waves have been conducted, funded, and influenced by the governments and companies trying to use and sell products and weapons.
The devices are safe, they say. The government research proves it. influenced by the governments and companies trying to use and sell products and weapons.
The devices are safe, they say.
The government research proves it.
And if there's one thing you can trust about government research,
is that you probably can't trust government research.
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