A simple transistor marginal oscillator for proton magnetic resonance. I built a modified version of this circuit as an undergraduate project in 1969. A dilute copper sulfate solution in a test tube is inserted into the coil. The copper salt speeds relaxation of the proton resonance and enhances signal strength. The resonance is calculated to be about 12.77 MHz at 3 kG. (Fig. 1 from Ref. 5, via an aged thermofax copy).
Development of technologies such as MRI has produced equipment that allows immersion of human subjects into magnetic fields of many Tesla. Advances in instrumentation have always enabled new scientific discoveries. The invention of the telescope showed the universe to be a different place than first imagined, and magnetic equipment developed for magnetic resonance imaging has shown the possibility of mind control in humans.[6-11]
A 2010 paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by scientists from , Harvard University, MIT and the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beth_Israel_Deaconess_Medical_Center
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center reports that magnetic stimulation of the right temporo-parietal junction of the brain affects moral judgment. The presumed mechanism is that the magnetic field impedes the normal firing of brain cells.[6-8]
The effect is only present when the magnetic field is applied - it isn't permanent. Experiments showed that the magnetic stimulation caused subjects to view morally ambiguous situations in a more favorable light. Study participants who were subjected to the focused magnetic field judged "attempted harms as less morally forbidden and more morally permissible."[6] Liane Young of MIT, a coauthor of the study, is quoted by the BBC as saying that "to be able to apply a magnetic field to a specific brain region and change people's moral judgments is really astonishing."[7]
A similar study, recently published in the journal, Behavioural Brain Research, by scientists from the University of Tartu (Tartu, Estonia) and the Estonian Academy of Security Sciences (Tallinn, Estonia), appears to show that magnetic stimulation of the leftmost part of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DPC) part of the brain caused test subjects to lie more often; and magnetic stimulation of the rightmost part of the DPC caused test subjects to tell the truth more often.[9-11]