Zero proof or evidence - more gaslighting of them making you think they have God tech than anything else.
It's more likely the pilot had an undisclosed tracking beacon on an unknown frequency or something like that.
There's plenty of creatures in the desert with heart beats... How do you know which one? Bu...bu...muh AI quantum an sheit
What about your precious remote viewing program? Why didn't you just use that?
It's all bullshit as far as I'm concerned... fairy tales...They use several buzz words few have ANY clue what they even mean. Most don't even know what AI even is... they're asking it Jesus questions... and quantum entanglement? Pfft...pass the bread and beer the game is coming on.
Believe what you want... but I remember those WW2 propaganda posters... and you make jappy so happy...
Today, as I stand before you, the CIA Is pleased to report that we have, in fact, obtained verified n00dz of Khomeiniâs mother. These highly classified p1xxx were obtained at great expense, through highly classified methods, which I am not at liberty to divulge here.
Rest assured, Iran has been notified that in the event that they fail to back down, Gloruous Leaderâs childhood binky will be released to 4chan, at which point, we assume, an innumerable amount of meat shall proceed to be tenderized.
The United States has no interest in further escalating this situation, but is prepared to take whatever steps are deemed necessary to accomplish its objectives.
You could be correct. But it is not that big of a jump to believe this technology exists. We could drop an A~bomb to a very small target in 1945 using the advanced, analog Norden bombsight for aiming. And it is well known that the United States has technology and weapons that have not been seen in action yet.
They'd have to had "digitized" his specific heart pattern... otherwise, how could they tell who they were looking for?
"There he is!!! Up... wait... nope... just a sand gerbil... keep looking"
If they did digitize it, as a matter of "service record/biostats" then fine - I guess it's impressive to be able to filter out everything else stepping on that miniscule signal...
But throwing the "quantum AI" horseshit around like you're the Egyptian magician to put the low IQ into a trance, is just really ghey...
Just speak the damned truth for once. Need I remind you who the Father of lies is?
Got a sudden hankering for bacon all of a sudden...but I don't know why...
Wait until those AI androids get affordable... they'll probably become an icon for the MGTOW movement...then they'll blow anything you like... for a low monthly fee, of course.
I'm actually waiting to train them for farm work... thinking of starting a cotton operation...this is where those "robot rights" come into play.
They can't have you leveraging technology to emulate days gone by where you had multiple wives and plenty of kids to build your empire...so there is that.
Yes, "Ghost Murmur" is real. It is a classified CIA surveillance tool that was publicly revealed in early April 2026 through reporting on its first known operational use.
nypost.com
According to multiple news outlets, including an exclusive New York Post report, Ghost Murmur uses long-range quantum magnetometry (specifically sensors based on microscopic defects in synthetic diamonds) combined with AI to detect the weak electromagnetic signal generated by a human heartbeat. This allows it to locate a person from significant distancesâpotentially tens of milesâin low-interference environments like remote deserts, where it can isolate an individual signature from background noise.
nypost.com
The name is descriptive: "murmur" refers to a heartbeat rhythm, and "ghost" alludes to finding someone who has effectively vanished. One source briefed on the program described it as "like hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles of desert," adding, "In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you."
nypost.com
It was developed by Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works (the company's secretive advanced development division) and had been tested on Black Hawk helicopters for potential future integration with platforms like F-35 jets, but this was its first field deployment by the CIA.
Is a heartbeat unique like a fingerprint? If so, has the CIA been capturing our heartbeat signatures? I mean, if I aim that thing in the direction of a lot of people, then what? Or is this for finding Muslims in caves?
The heart is directly connected to the brain, gut and nervous system through the vagus nerve. The heart and gut contain neurons just like your brain does. Each part emits electromagnetic energy. All of these attributes could be data mined for surveillance purposes.
CIA's greatest weapon is lies. Their second greatest weapon is omission. Their third greatest weapon is misdirection.
Ratfink says so right away. "While at the same time, keeping our enemies misdirected"
This is no different. Btw, the enemy, is you. The CIA's enemies are everyone that isn't CIA or the secret unknowns for which they work
Please Tell us the science behind something that can detect a human heartbeat MILES away. You cannot. It doesn't exist. Physics doesn't allow it. It's called attenuation and entropy. There is too much background noise (information, wind noise, light / including infrared), it floods it out miles away. Explain how you can defeat math, and then we'll believe you.
Also, isn't it great we have magic tech like that but we still don't have something as seemingly simple as flying cars (we have quadcopter drones, why can't we scale them up?) OH because we're too busy defeating physics with MILES away, because you see the human heart is like a finely tuned infrared laser pointed directly at the device you're using at all times.
You are wondering about spectral analysis. Any electromagnetic emission can be analyzed for its spectrum and classified. Such analysis can discern between individual radiators. The math, physics and engineering to be able to do so is decades old. Signature analysis can identify, for instance, individual radio transmitters. It is my considered opinion that, with enough data, individual humans could be identified by their electrical emissions. Physics, however still subjects all emissions to the inverse square law.
what is the maximum distance that the electromagnetic signal produced by a human heart can be detected?
Searching the web
50 results
The electromagnetic signal from a human heart primarily refers to the magnetic field generated by the electrical activity of the heart (measured via magnetocardiography, or MCG). This field is the strongest rhythmic biomagnetic signal produced by the bodyâroughly 100 times stronger than the brain's magnetic field.
heartmath.org
Standard Detection Range with Sensitive EquipmentUsing highly sensitive instruments like SQUID-based magnetometers (Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices), the heart's magnetic field can be reliably detected up to about 3 feet (approximately 1 meter) away from the body in all directions. This is a commonly cited figure from research by the HeartMath Institute and related studies. The field extends outward but weakens rapidly with distance (following the inverse-cube law for magnetic dipole fields at larger distances).
heartmath.org
At closer ranges:Peak amplitudes are typically 10â100 picotesla (pT) when measured a few centimeters (e.g., ~3 cm) above the chest.
The field is much stronger nearer the heart itself (on the order of nanotesla near the myocardium).
These measurements require magnetically shielded environments or extremely sensitive sensors because the heart's magnetic field is still very weak compared to Earth's magnetic field (~30â60 microtesla) or urban electromagnetic noise.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Practical and Theoretical LimitsEveryday or less-sensitive detection: The signal drops off quickly and is not detectable by standard consumer devices beyond very short distances (centimeters to maybe a meter at best with advanced but non-SQUID sensors).
Theoretical maximum: In principle, with ideal, noise-free conditions and ultra-sensitive detectors (approaching femtotesla sensitivity), the signal could be picked up farther than 3 feet. However, real-world environmental noise, the field's rapid decay, and the need for signal averaging or shielding limit practical detection. Some speculative or less rigorously documented claims mention "several feet" or even a few meters, but these are not standard in peer-reviewed contexts.
facebook.com
No widely accepted scientific evidence supports detection at distances of tens of meters or more using purely passive electromagnetic sensing of the natural heart field.
Related Technologies (Not Pure Passive Detection)Some systems detect heart-related signals at much greater distances, but they differ from the natural electromagnetic field:Radar or Doppler-based systems (e.g., microwave or laser vibrometry like the Pentagon's Jetson prototype) can detect heartbeat signatures from up to 200 meters by sensing chest wall movements or reflections, not the heart's own bioelectromagnetic field.
technologyreview.com
Search-and-rescue radars (e.g., NASA's FINDER) can locate people via vital signs through rubble at tens of feet.
These are active sensing methods, not direct detection of the heart's emitted electromagnetic signal.Key DistinctionsThe electric component of the heart's signal (as in a standard ECG) is measured via skin contact and does not radiate far.
The magnetic component radiates more effectively but still only to ~1 meter with current sensitive lab instruments.
Claims of the field "reaching 3 feet" often come from popular summaries of HeartMath research, which used SQUID magnetometers for confirmation.
psychologytoday.com
In summary, the maximum reliably documented distance for detecting the human heart's natural electromagnetic (primarily magnetic) signal with specialized scientific equipment is on the order of 3 feet (~1 meter). Beyond that, practical limits due to field strength and noise make detection extremely challenging without active remote sensing techniques. For medical or research purposes, sensors are almost always placed very close to the body (centimeters).
Although such technology MIGHT be able to detect a human heartbeat from a few meters, perhaps even a few tens of meters, the inverse cube signal degradation makes it impossible to detect from the distances being reported. The technology may be good for finding people in rubble, or hiding behind a wall?, but certainly not for detecting someone from hundreds to thousands of meters away.
I would keep an open mind that maybe they are using something else instead of the magnetometers.
I am actually friend with a former Naval officer who was a weapon specialist. He won't tell me the details but he said even in the 60, they have developed tons of very sophisticated weapons and technology.
Yes, "Ghost Murmur" is real. It is a classified CIA surveillance tool that was publicly revealed in early April 2026 through reporting on its first known operational use.
nypost.com
According to multiple news outlets, including an exclusive New York Post report, Ghost Murmur uses long-range quantum magnetometry (specifically sensors based on microscopic defects in synthetic diamonds) combined with AI to detect the weak electromagnetic signal generated by a human heartbeat. This allows it to locate a person from significant distancesâpotentially tens of milesâin low-interference environments like remote deserts, where it can isolate an individual signature from background noise.
nypost.com
The name is descriptive: "murmur" refers to a heartbeat rhythm, and "ghost" alludes to finding someone who has effectively vanished. One source briefed on the program described it as "like hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles of desert," adding, "In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you."
nypost.com
It was developed by Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works (the company's secretive advanced development division) and had been tested on Black Hawk helicopters for potential future integration with platforms like F-35 jets, but this was its first field deployment by the CIA.
And what it does is give you what an answer WOULD look like if the tech DID exist. AKA, it can and will completely hallucinate details about such a device
You mean all the info brought by anonymous sources and people familiar with the matter? That grok then takes and happily and confidently declares that it definitely exists while citing questionable sources?
Yeah... I'm not buying it.
Zero proof or evidence - more gaslighting of them making you think they have God tech than anything else.
It's more likely the pilot had an undisclosed tracking beacon on an unknown frequency or something like that.
There's plenty of creatures in the desert with heart beats... How do you know which one? Bu...bu...muh AI quantum an sheit
What about your precious remote viewing program? Why didn't you just use that?
It's all bullshit as far as I'm concerned... fairy tales...They use several buzz words few have ANY clue what they even mean. Most don't even know what AI even is... they're asking it Jesus questions... and quantum entanglement? Pfft...pass the bread and beer the game is coming on.
Believe what you want... but I remember those WW2 propaganda posters... and you make jappy so happy...
Rather believe they have it then thinking the lost soldier use a laser light to call for sos
IR laser is a possibility...
I know.
u/#kek
You could be correct. But it is not that big of a jump to believe this technology exists. We could drop an A~bomb to a very small target in 1945 using the advanced, analog Norden bombsight for aiming. And it is well known that the United States has technology and weapons that have not been seen in action yet.
They'd have to had "digitized" his specific heart pattern... otherwise, how could they tell who they were looking for?
"There he is!!! Up... wait... nope... just a sand gerbil... keep looking"
If they did digitize it, as a matter of "service record/biostats" then fine - I guess it's impressive to be able to filter out everything else stepping on that miniscule signal...
But throwing the "quantum AI" horseshit around like you're the Egyptian magician to put the low IQ into a trance, is just really ghey...
Just speak the damned truth for once. Need I remind you who the Father of lies is?
Got a sudden hankering for bacon all of a sudden...but I don't know why...
Upvoted for "sand gerbil"đ¸
Actually I am still waiting on AI to blow my mind.....I haven't felt a breeze yet. Like a Ghost in the MACHINE
u/#q150
Note also the [L][d][R]
u/brain_dead u/joys1daughter
See also: https://qagg.news/?read=183
Wait until those AI androids get affordable... they'll probably become an icon for the MGTOW movement...then they'll blow anything you like... for a low monthly fee, of course.
I'm actually waiting to train them for farm work... thinking of starting a cotton operation...this is where those "robot rights" come into play.
They can't have you leveraging technology to emulate days gone by where you had multiple wives and plenty of kids to build your empire...so there is that.
Do HEMP.....I used to Hunt in Cotton fields...ROUGH
Plus, hydrogen peroxide to bleach paper pulp, not chlorine etc...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmXuaHX3QeY
Too much noise around for that to work at a distance. But now there are some who are worried that shit might find them
Some think it's just bullshit.
"Exquisite Technology" - Ratcliffe
I asked Grok
Yes, "Ghost Murmur" is real. It is a classified CIA surveillance tool that was publicly revealed in early April 2026 through reporting on its first known operational use.
nypost.com
According to multiple news outlets, including an exclusive New York Post report, Ghost Murmur uses long-range quantum magnetometry (specifically sensors based on microscopic defects in synthetic diamonds) combined with AI to detect the weak electromagnetic signal generated by a human heartbeat. This allows it to locate a person from significant distancesâpotentially tens of milesâin low-interference environments like remote deserts, where it can isolate an individual signature from background noise.
nypost.com
The name is descriptive: "murmur" refers to a heartbeat rhythm, and "ghost" alludes to finding someone who has effectively vanished. One source briefed on the program described it as "like hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles of desert," adding, "In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you."
nypost.com
It was developed by Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works (the company's secretive advanced development division) and had been tested on Black Hawk helicopters for potential future integration with platforms like F-35 jets, but this was its first field deployment by the CIA.
nypost.com
This can be potentially life-saving technology to find people lost in remote areas.
See Eye A deemed it too expensive to go search for lost hikers unless you are Elon or someone like such.
Thanks bd!
Welcome.
We can finally find out if Biden is really alive!
We know, or at least I do.
Is a heartbeat unique like a fingerprint? If so, has the CIA been capturing our heartbeat signatures? I mean, if I aim that thing in the direction of a lot of people, then what? Or is this for finding Muslims in caves?
The heart is directly connected to the brain, gut and nervous system through the vagus nerve. The heart and gut contain neurons just like your brain does. Each part emits electromagnetic energy. All of these attributes could be data mined for surveillance purposes.
Except for the fact that EM waves are notoriously bad at traveling through water. A human is approximately a sack of water.
I am only a brain-dead. LOL
CIA's greatest weapon is lies. Their second greatest weapon is omission. Their third greatest weapon is misdirection.
Ratfink says so right away. "While at the same time, keeping our enemies misdirected"
This is no different. Btw, the enemy, is you. The CIA's enemies are everyone that isn't CIA or the secret unknowns for which they work
Please Tell us the science behind something that can detect a human heartbeat MILES away. You cannot. It doesn't exist. Physics doesn't allow it. It's called attenuation and entropy. There is too much background noise (information, wind noise, light / including infrared), it floods it out miles away. Explain how you can defeat math, and then we'll believe you.
Also, isn't it great we have magic tech like that but we still don't have something as seemingly simple as flying cars (we have quadcopter drones, why can't we scale them up?) OH because we're too busy defeating physics with MILES away, because you see the human heart is like a finely tuned infrared laser pointed directly at the device you're using at all times.
I see your point.
Can the technology detect a specific heartbeat that creates a specific electromagnetic signal that is exclusive to the person's heart being tracked?
You are wondering about spectral analysis. Any electromagnetic emission can be analyzed for its spectrum and classified. Such analysis can discern between individual radiators. The math, physics and engineering to be able to do so is decades old. Signature analysis can identify, for instance, individual radio transmitters. It is my considered opinion that, with enough data, individual humans could be identified by their electrical emissions. Physics, however still subjects all emissions to the inverse square law.
How about one with the vaccine?
Wonder if similar tech was used to monitor Lynn de Rothschild
Soros.
This is why this is BS, according to GROK:
what is the maximum distance that the electromagnetic signal produced by a human heart can be detected?
Searching the web
50 results
The electromagnetic signal from a human heart primarily refers to the magnetic field generated by the electrical activity of the heart (measured via magnetocardiography, or MCG). This field is the strongest rhythmic biomagnetic signal produced by the bodyâroughly 100 times stronger than the brain's magnetic field.
heartmath.org
Standard Detection Range with Sensitive EquipmentUsing highly sensitive instruments like SQUID-based magnetometers (Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices), the heart's magnetic field can be reliably detected up to about 3 feet (approximately 1 meter) away from the body in all directions. This is a commonly cited figure from research by the HeartMath Institute and related studies. The field extends outward but weakens rapidly with distance (following the inverse-cube law for magnetic dipole fields at larger distances).
heartmath.org
At closer ranges:Peak amplitudes are typically 10â100 picotesla (pT) when measured a few centimeters (e.g., ~3 cm) above the chest. The field is much stronger nearer the heart itself (on the order of nanotesla near the myocardium).
These measurements require magnetically shielded environments or extremely sensitive sensors because the heart's magnetic field is still very weak compared to Earth's magnetic field (~30â60 microtesla) or urban electromagnetic noise.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Practical and Theoretical LimitsEveryday or less-sensitive detection: The signal drops off quickly and is not detectable by standard consumer devices beyond very short distances (centimeters to maybe a meter at best with advanced but non-SQUID sensors). Theoretical maximum: In principle, with ideal, noise-free conditions and ultra-sensitive detectors (approaching femtotesla sensitivity), the signal could be picked up farther than 3 feet. However, real-world environmental noise, the field's rapid decay, and the need for signal averaging or shielding limit practical detection. Some speculative or less rigorously documented claims mention "several feet" or even a few meters, but these are not standard in peer-reviewed contexts.
facebook.com
No widely accepted scientific evidence supports detection at distances of tens of meters or more using purely passive electromagnetic sensing of the natural heart field.
Related Technologies (Not Pure Passive Detection)Some systems detect heart-related signals at much greater distances, but they differ from the natural electromagnetic field:Radar or Doppler-based systems (e.g., microwave or laser vibrometry like the Pentagon's Jetson prototype) can detect heartbeat signatures from up to 200 meters by sensing chest wall movements or reflections, not the heart's own bioelectromagnetic field.
technologyreview.com
Search-and-rescue radars (e.g., NASA's FINDER) can locate people via vital signs through rubble at tens of feet.
These are active sensing methods, not direct detection of the heart's emitted electromagnetic signal.Key DistinctionsThe electric component of the heart's signal (as in a standard ECG) is measured via skin contact and does not radiate far. The magnetic component radiates more effectively but still only to ~1 meter with current sensitive lab instruments. Claims of the field "reaching 3 feet" often come from popular summaries of HeartMath research, which used SQUID magnetometers for confirmation.
psychologytoday.com
In summary, the maximum reliably documented distance for detecting the human heart's natural electromagnetic (primarily magnetic) signal with specialized scientific equipment is on the order of 3 feet (~1 meter). Beyond that, practical limits due to field strength and noise make detection extremely challenging without active remote sensing techniques. For medical or research purposes, sensors are almost always placed very close to the body (centimeters).
50 web pages
Although such technology MIGHT be able to detect a human heartbeat from a few meters, perhaps even a few tens of meters, the inverse cube signal degradation makes it impossible to detect from the distances being reported. The technology may be good for finding people in rubble, or hiding behind a wall?, but certainly not for detecting someone from hundreds to thousands of meters away.
I understand the skepticism.
I would keep an open mind that maybe they are using something else instead of the magnetometers.
I am actually friend with a former Naval officer who was a weapon specialist. He won't tell me the details but he said even in the 60, they have developed tons of very sophisticated weapons and technology.
Any device operating in the electromagnetic spectrum can be blocked and/or spoofed.
Like to hear that.
I like how it can discern the nationality of the heartbeat.
LOL
The video said no such thing.
I asked Grok
Yes, "Ghost Murmur" is real. It is a classified CIA surveillance tool that was publicly revealed in early April 2026 through reporting on its first known operational use.
nypost.com
According to multiple news outlets, including an exclusive New York Post report, Ghost Murmur uses long-range quantum magnetometry (specifically sensors based on microscopic defects in synthetic diamonds) combined with AI to detect the weak electromagnetic signal generated by a human heartbeat. This allows it to locate a person from significant distancesâpotentially tens of milesâin low-interference environments like remote deserts, where it can isolate an individual signature from background noise.
nypost.com
The name is descriptive: "murmur" refers to a heartbeat rhythm, and "ghost" alludes to finding someone who has effectively vanished. One source briefed on the program described it as "like hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles of desert," adding, "In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you."
nypost.com
It was developed by Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works (the company's secretive advanced development division) and had been tested on Black Hawk helicopters for potential future integration with platforms like F-35 jets, but this was its first field deployment by the CIA.
nypost.com
If Grok says its real then it must be /s/
Ok. Must be fake if Grok say so.
Why would Grok know about secret technology?
It doesnt
And what it does is give you what an answer WOULD look like if the tech DID exist. AKA, it can and will completely hallucinate details about such a device
If the info not on the web, AI or Grok won't know. You are correct.
Because it is no longer secret. Read the Grok article pasted by BD. Everything Grok says can be found online in text and in videos since the rescue.
You mean all the info brought by anonymous sources and people familiar with the matter? That grok then takes and happily and confidently declares that it definitely exists while citing questionable sources?
If AI can detect a human heartbeat from miles away... then how long will it be before AI can alter or stop that heartbeat?
Go read Psychic Warrior.
I have a bridge to sell
Why telling us about a bridge now?
IF true, that system needs to be immediately transferred to the Department of War, not in the hands of the Clowns in America/juiclelands Mossad
Oh yes, true. I like your idea.
Human Heart = HH = 88, but in the movie it's supposed to be 88 miles per hour, not 88 miles away.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/8Fek-1Ju5Oc
Or... this is all a movie and that tech doesn't actually exist, but is being used to scare people into thinking it does.
Seems likely.
AHEM.. future terminators..cough
My 1st thought.
Tons