Resonance

 


Resonance is the tendency of a system to oscillate with maximum amplitude at certain frequencies. The cells of the human body vibrate, or oscillate. Electromagnetic impulses of the appropriate frequencies can produce cellular resonance.

Each cell membrane, of the 75 trillion cells in the human body, has over 1 million neuropeptide receptors. An electromagnetic field applied within the biological window signals all of these receptors simultaneously at the speed of light.

One can picture the cellular resonance produced – all cells vibrating and oscillating in phase. This is the essence of magnetic resonance stimulation.

The profound beneficial effects in human physiology through magnetic resonance may be produced through improved intercellular communication and intracellular interactions produced through the induction of resonance in the body.

The new generation of magnetic field therapy systems targets the extremely low frequency range – matching known tonic oscillatory frequencies of the body’s cells. The iMRS systems are examples of the use of advanced computerized stochastic resonance modeling to achieve maximum cellular resonance.

Access the web

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why a Pulse?

Resonance