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Published: Saturday, 31 August 2024 at 07:15 AM


If you were to measure all the electromagnetic activity in Earth’s atmosphere, you’d notice peaks at different points along the spectrum.

There’s one such peak at 50Hz, caused by radiation from mains electricity grids worldwide, but it’s a series of peaks seen in the Extremely Low Frequency (ELF) part of the spectrum – that’s the band from 3Hz to 30Hz – that we’re more interested in.

These peaks occur at the Schumann resonances, which are the resonant frequencies of the Earth-ionosphere cavity, and they represent standing electronic waves that encircle our planet as a result of lightning activity.

Find out more about magnetic fields and the electromagnetic spectrum