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Resonant Frequencies May Help To Trace, Delineate, Shatter and Torpedo COVID-19 Physiognomies
Resonant Frequencies May Help To Trace, Delineate, Shatter and Torpedo COVID-19 Physiognomies
Resonant Frequencies May Help To Trace, Delineate, Shatter and Torpedo COVID-19 Physiognomies
Academia Letters, June 2021 ©2021 by the author — Open Access — Distributed under CC BY 4.0
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of frequencies may impose the object to shake and produce effects such as the formation of
kinetic or potential energy and the production of resultant heat and sound waves (Danquah
et al. 2011, Guo et al. 2014, Ilkhani et al. 2016, Li et al. 2015, Ohlinger et al. 2012, Yang
et al. 2015, Zhang et al. 2014). A specific object can be dissolved using resonance force
by the Interrelationship of higher amplitude frequencies. For instance, an earthquake, while
matching with the natural frequencies of a structure, destroys it (Guo et al. 2014, Habibi and
Neild 2019, Li et al. 2015, Marx 2015, Trela and Kwidziński 2018, Yang et al. 2015, Yoon et
al. 2016, Zhang et al. 2014). Suchlike, nanoscopic or microscopic objects contain their spec-
ified anatomy and physiognomies. Similarly, viruses retain their biological structures such
as molecular machines and motor proteins, which helps them function, sustain and reside in
the atmosphere, and pass toward suitable objects with the help of frequencies and appropriate
mediums (Ding et al. 2013, Ilkhani et al. 2016).
Similarly, COVID-19 resides in the troposphere and transmit by condensed aerosols and
aerobically tumbling between favorable bodies by sneezing and coughing (Anderson et al.
2020). Like other objects, the COVID-19 virus may have its natural frequency or set of fre-
quencies that can force the biological structure of the virus to vibrate, weak, and produce
energy and resultant heat that can decapsulate, expose and dissolve the COVID-19 structure
within the external environment (Habibi and Neild 2019, Ilkhani et al. 2016, Li et al. 2015,
Marx 2015, Trela and Kwidziński 2018, Yang et al. 2015). Frequencies higher than natu-
ral frequencies can enforce the COVID-19 structure to produce unique and identifiable sound
waves. In case frequencies recognized, help develops methods to indicate virus presence by
inference of frequencies and probing acoustic waves from COVID-19 structure (Ding et al.
2013, Ohlinger et al. 2012). Resonant frequencies further may produce a driving force that
may interfere with the COVID-19 structure. They can jolt and break virus anatomy using
appropriate resonance formation methods such as biological resonance, acoustic, electromag-
netic, particle, orbital, or optical resonances (Habibi and Neild 2019, Ilkhani et al. 2016,
Marx 2015, Trela and Kwidziński 2018, Yoon et al. 2016, Yang et al. 2015, Zhang et al.
2014, Le Bihan and Iima 2015). COVID-19 protein spike anatomy may effectively help fre-
quencies distinguish COVID-19 biological structure through protein legs, resulting in heat
and destruct virus. The vibration of spike protein legs may produce identifiable active sound
waves for the development of detection methods to trace virus presence by sensing acoustic
frequencies (Danquah et al. 2011, Ding et al. 2013, Ilkhani et al. 2016, Yoon et al. 2016,
Yang et al. 2015, Zhang et al. 2014). The shape of COVID-19 protein spikes may help de-
velop resonance equipment to unbind, destruct and diffuse COVID-19 biological structure
within the outer environment (Trela and Kwidziński 2018, Zhang et al. 2014). A controlled
experimental environment can help explore resonant frequencies of COVID-19 to distinguish
Academia Letters, June 2021 ©2021 by the author — Open Access — Distributed under CC BY 4.0
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the COVID-19 shape and the devastating saturation points. Also, to discover acoustic satura-
tion point to produce COVID-19 soundwaves their traceability and recognization (Guo et al.
2014, Habibi and Neild 2019, Ilkhani et al. 2016, Le Bihan and Iima 2015, Li et al. 2015,
Marx 2015, Yoon et al. 2016, Yang et al. 2015, Zhang et al. 2014).
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Academia Letters, June 2021 ©2021 by the author — Open Access — Distributed under CC BY 4.0