Ingo Swann's Magnetometer | |
---|---|
Origin |
Ingo Swann |
Type |
Magnetometer |
Effects |
Can visualize nearby hidden locations or extremely distant areas with clarity. Causes visions of gas giants. |
Downsides |
Loses time and guidance with more deliberate focusing. Crystallization similar to ice cold conditions |
Activation |
Focusing on the machine |
Collected by |
Warehouse 13 |
Section |
|
Date of Collection |
February 25, 2025 |
[Source] |
Origin[]
Ingo Douglass Swann (September 14, 1933 – January 31, 2013) was an American psychic, artist, and author, whose claims of clairvoyance were investigated as a part of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Stargate Project. Swann is credited as the creator of the term “Remote Viewing," a term which refers to the use of extrasensory perception to perceive distant persons, places, or events.
On June 6, 1972, the two men visited Dr. Arthur Heberd and his quark detector, a magnetometer, at the Varian Physics Building. The well-shielded magnetometer had a small magnetic probe in a vault five feet beneath the floor. The oscillation ran silently for about an hour, tracing a stable pattern on the chart recorder. Puthoff asked Swann if he could affect the magnetometer's magnetic field. Swann said he focused his attention on the interior of the magnetometer and was getting nothing. Several times the recorded frequency fluctuated erratically, but Swann only asked whether the change was an equipment function.
Swann proposed a study to remote view Jupiter and its moons before the Voyager probe's visit there in 1979. Swann said his ability to see Jupiter took about three and a half minutes. In the session, he made several reports on the physical features of Jupiter, such as its atmosphere and the surface of its core. Swann claimed to see bands of crystals in the atmosphere, which he likened to clouds and possibly like the rings of Saturn. The Voyager probe later confirmed the existence of the rings of Jupiter, although these rings are not in the planet's atmosphere. However, Swann's claim that crystals are present in the atmosphere is supported by observations by NASA's Galileo spacecraft of clouds of ammonia ice crystals in the northwest corner of Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Swann's total observations lasted for about 20 minutes. He did not mention any of the 95 moons of Jupiter. The raw data comprised only four pages, but subsequent studies citing the passage later amounted to 300 pages.
Effects[]
Shows user clear images of a location, usually an obscured area within their nearby proximity or some far-flung region elsewhere. Usually somewhere they have no existing references for what it appears like. Causes visions of gas giants, along with their rings and moons to trail behind their eyes afterwards.
Trying to focus on a specified place reduces the amount of time they can maintain the connection and how much they can wander around their target. Everything becomes locked to their immediate peripheral surroundings, down to a few feet of travel for a few minutes maximum. The Jovian visions creep through to the user, slowly freezing them from the inside out. Exposure to superchilled gases makes them frost over like they were in the stratosphere, far away from any solar warmth.