Time Innovation; Microbiology-Earth’s most predominant DNA/RNA lifeform: microorganisms


I never read any articles like this as I was doing my own research on the Time Harmonic, yet I found this out, and my book is titled “Time is DNA, Sound, and Light”. They leave out the issue of time, probably because we are in a time warp, and it is affecting all life on earth. We are atrophying. The scientists would not equate time and solar cycles with the changes in microorganisms. That’s like not connecting God to the existence of humans, which of course people do all the time. Hence, the deterioration of human brains.

Examining Sound, Light, and Vibrations as Tools to Manage Microbes and Support Holobionts, Ecosystems, and Technologies


Rodney R Dietert 1,*, Janice M Dietert 2
Editor: Peter Neubauer
PMCID: PMC11123986  PMID: 38792734
Abstract

The vast array of interconnected microorganisms across Earth’s ecosystems and within holobionts has been called the “Internet of Microbes.” Bacteria and archaea are masters of energy and information collection, storage, transformation, and dissemination using both “wired” and wireless (at a distance) functions.

Specific tools affecting microbial energy and information functions offer effective strategies for managing microbial populations within, between, and beyond holobionts. This narrative review focuses on microbial management using a subset of physical modifiers of microbes: sound and light (as well as related vibrations).

These are examined as follows:

(1) as tools for managing microbial populations,

(2) as tools to support new technologies,

(3) as tools for healing humans and other holobionts, and

(4) as potential safety dangers for microbial populations and their holobionts.

Given microbial sensitivity to sound, light, and vibrations, it is critical that we assign a higher priority to the effects of these physical factors on microbial populations and microbe-laden holobionts.

We conclude that specific sound, light, and/or vibrational conditions are significant therapeutic tools that can help support useful microbial populations and help to address the ongoing challenges of holobiont disease. We also caution that inappropriate sound, light, and/or vibration exposure can represent significant hazards that require greater recognition.

Here is the full article.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11123986/