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 distances—potentially tens of miles—in 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.
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 distances—potentially tens of miles—in 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.