History

Spectrogram Archive

Browse Earth's electromagnetic history — one day at a time.

68 Avg today · 95 Peak · 43 Readings

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Listen to 7.83 Hz

Free in-browser binaural + isochronic tone generator at Earth's Schumann frequency.

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Tomsk (RU) 43 readings

30 Calm
07:40
30 Calm
07:40
60 Active
07:40
60 Active
07:41
60 Active
07:41
60 Active
07:41
56 Elevated
07:41
60 Active
07:41
63 Active
07:42
63 Active
07:42
74 Active
07:42
78 Active
07:42
67 Active
07:42
74 Active
07:43
53 Elevated
07:43
63 Active
07:43
76 Active
07:43
76 Active
07:44
76 Active
07:44
80 Active
07:44
80 Active
07:44
84 Active
07:44
95 Storm
07:44
95 Storm
07:44
74 Active
07:45
63 Active
07:45
74 Active
07:45
74 Active
08:00
76 Active
09:00
76 Active
10:00
78 Active
11:00
78 Active
12:00
80 Active
13:00
80 Active
14:00
74 Active
15:00
74 Active
16:00
74 Active
17:00
60 Active
18:00
60 Active
19:00
60 Active
20:00
60 Active
21:00
53 Elevated
22:00
55 Elevated
23:00

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Solar Storm Status

Live NOAA Kp, solar wind, and G-scale forecast — see the storm before it arrives.

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Score Timeline

07:00 23:00

How to Read Schumann Resonance Charts

A Schumann Resonance chart (spectrogram) is a visual record of electromagnetic waves bouncing between Earth's surface and the ionosphere. The fundamental frequency sits around 7.83 Hz, with harmonics at roughly 14.3, 20.8, 27.3, and 33.8 Hz. On a spectrogram, these show up as horizontal bands. When the bands brighten or shift, something interesting is happening in the ionosphere — often linked to solar wind, geomagnetic storms, or lightning activity.

Bright vertical streaks across multiple frequencies typically indicate a burst of global lightning activity or a sudden ionospheric disturbance. A steady, clean pattern with distinct bands suggests calm conditions. If the bands blur together or shift upward, that can point to increased geomagnetic activity — the kind of days where sensitive people sometimes report headaches, restlessness, or vivid dreams.

This archive stores every reading we collect from three independent stations. Cross-referencing multiple stations matters because local electrical interference can make a single station's data misleading. When all three stations agree, you can trust the reading. Browse day by day, spot patterns over weeks, or compare how a geomagnetic storm looked from Siberia versus the Mediterranean. Tomsk, Cumiana, ETNA. Live Graph →

Understanding the Score

0-39: Calm
40-59: Elevated
60-84: Active
85-100: Storm