Another Mystery Discovered in Giza pyramid

New research by an international team of physicists has revealed that Giza's Great Pyramid may be able to focus electromagnetic energy on its hidden rooms and beneath its base. Scientists at Itmo University in Russia and Germany's Zentrum Laser Hannover applied the methods of theoretical physics to [...]
Scientists at Itmo University in Russia and Germany's Zentrum Laser Hannover applied the methods of theoretical physics to investigate the electromagnetic response of ancient Egyptian pyramid to radio waves.
Their calculations predicted that in a rezonant state, the pyramid could focus electromagnetic energy on its interior rooms, as well as under its base, where the third incomplete chamber is located.
The Great Pyramid is the largest and most complex of the pyramids on Giza Plain. Last year a 100 - foot [30 m] hidden chamber was discovered, adding the mystery surrounding the oldest of the seven wonders of the ancient world and promoting new studies in the legendary Egyptian structure.
“Egyptian pyramids have always attracted great attention. We as scientists were also interested in them, so we decided to see the Great Pyramid as a particle that waves the resonant radio”, Dr. Andrey Evlyukhin, co-author.
The research team created a 3D model of pyramid and used analytical methods of theoretical physics to come up with their findings. To explain the results, scientists developed a multipolar analysis of a method widely used in physics to study interaction between a complex object and an electromagnetic field.












