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How does a human voice break a glass with resonance?

The wavelength of the sound is over half a metre in our range but having been an engineer in a telecommunications company for the last 7 years I realised the telephone line bandwidth is 3 kHz. I searched the web and found this picture of the frequencies of a human voice. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_voice The harmonics of the human voice are what resonates the glass because their wavelengths are smaller and match the glasses natural frequency. If you look at all the other devices out there such as zappers, magnetic pulsers etc most of them are using square waves or infinite impulses that are rich in harmonics. The magnetic pulse food cleaner (US Patent# 4524079) kills 50% of bacteria with just one high energy pulse. Think how powerful the harmonics of that pulse must be. This brings me back to the Rife Beam Ray unit that Hoyland an engineer developed. He clearly saw that it was the harmonics doing the job and set about getting the unit to generate as many as possible by creating a saw tooth wave that has double the harmonics of a square wave since it contains both odd and even harmonics. That was a big penny wasnt it. It would be interesting to see the frequency emissions spectrum of a Rife Beam Ray device like that done on the Lakhovsky MWO unit that showed high output in the 1 to 10 GHz range. I dont subscribe to the idea that sine waves of low frequencies will do the job since it is almost impossible to generate a perfect sine wave especially in the 1930s and the minute it enters the body it wont be a sine wave anymore. On the skin effect the writer has lost the plot. Skin refers to the surface of metal conductors not human skin. As everybody knows radio waves pass through organic material but mobile phones that operate in the 1GHz range have been shown to be good brain cell heaters.

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