5/16: Schumann Update


From Glynce: Earth’s natural frequencies are showing elevated activity today, with powerful energy waves rippling through the atmosphere. Many skywatchers and space weather enthusiasts are closely monitoring these resonance spikes as geomagnetic conditions continue to shift. 🌌
The Schumann Resonance, often called the “heartbeat of the Earth,” reflects electromagnetic activity between the Earth’s surface and the ionosphere. While fluctuations are normal, stronger pulses can create stunning visual patterns and increased interest across the global space weather community. ✨
Stay grounded, stay aware, and keep watching the skies.

From MR MBB333:
EARTH’S FREQUENCY WAS PULSING AT EXTREME LEVELS ⚡️
Last night the Schumann chart looked absolutely chaotic.
Instead of one solid blast, the frequency kept surging in uneven waves for nearly 9 hours straight — repeatedly slamming into the upper end of the scale near 50 Hz before dropping and exploding again.
The pattern almost looked alive.
Some sections were so intense the chart appeared nearly saturated while sharp energy streaks kept firing across the graph hour after hour.
Even people who never follow the Schumann Resonance were messaging saying they slept strangely or woke up multiple times during the night.
A powerful surge has appeared on the latest Schumann Resonance charts, showing intensified electromagnetic activity within Earth’s natural frequency spectrum.
The bright white and red spikes visible on the spectrogram indicate unusually strong signal amplitudes compared to the calmer blue and green background levels seen earlier in the cycle. These frequencies are generated by global lightning activity interacting with the space between Earth’s surface and the ionosphere.
📡 The strongest fundamental frequency remains near 7.83 Hz, often referred to as Earth’s “heartbeat,” while higher harmonics continue fluctuating throughout the monitoring period.
Researchers monitor Schumann Resonance data to study:
• Geomagnetic and solar activity
• Atmospheric electrical changes
• Global thunderstorm intensity
• Ionospheric disturbances
While dramatic spikes often attract attention online, scientists continue to debate how significant these fluctuations truly are beyond natural atmospheric and space-weather processes.
Source: Schumann Resonance Monitoring Station, Space Weather observations.