We've Moved! Visit our NEW FORUM to join the latest discussions. This is an archive of our previous conversations...

You can find the login page for the old forum here.
CHATPRIVACYDONATELOGINREGISTER
DMT-Nexus
FAQWIKIHEALTH & SAFETYARTATTITUDEACTIVE TOPICS
PREV123
Are Cell Phones Carcinogenic? Options
 
pitubo
#41 Posted : 1/11/2015 7:10:56 PM

dysfunctional word machine

Senior Member

Posts: 1831
Joined: 15-Mar-2014
Last visit: 11-Jun-2018
Location: at the center of my universe
benzyme wrote:
mutagenic radiation is ionizing radiation

254 nm UV light is by conventional definition non-ionizing, yet it welds thymine bases in DNA together quite effectively.

benzyme wrote:
microwaves are non-ionizing.

Check out some of the "Microwave plasma ball" videos on youtube, they're funny!

Ever seen a 1000 Watt fluorescent bulb? Put any fluorescent bulb in the microwave today! (Disclaimer: shield the electrodes properly from the microwave radiation or it will glow so hot that the tube breaks, releasing toxic mercury vapors and toxic inner tube coating into kitchen. Best put the bulb into a closed jar before putting into the microwave. Use a microwave device that is not used anymore for preparing food. Additionally, don't perform this experiment with a 254 nm UVC bulb.)

benzyme wrote:
moreover, amplitude is too low to harm tissues from thermal effects

However, have non-thermal effects been definitively ruled out rigorously yet?
 

Explore our global analysis service for precise testing of your extracts and other substances.
 
benzyme
#42 Posted : 1/11/2015 7:23:06 PM

analytical chemist

Moderator | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertExtreme Chemical expert | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertChemical expert | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertSenior Member | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expert

Posts: 7463
Joined: 21-May-2008
Last visit: 03-Mar-2024
Location: the lab
pitubo wrote:
benzyme wrote:
mutagenic radiation is ionizing radiation

254 nm UV light is by conventional definition non-ionizing, yet it welds thymine bases in DNA together quite effectively.


254 nm (253.7) is in the UV spectrum, not microwave. UV-C can create ozone from oxygen in air, that is ionization.
"Nothing is true, everything is permitted." ~ hassan i sabbah
"Experiments are the only means of attaining knowledge at our disposal. The rest is poetry, imagination." -Max Planck
 
Knarkkorven
#43 Posted : 1/11/2015 8:01:46 PM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 42
Joined: 02-Jan-2015
Last visit: 19-Aug-2017
Location: Sweden
If we want to lower the proposed cancer risk, we need to lower the output power from our mobile phones. They are constructed to adjust their output power in relation to the base station reception. Bad reception = high output, good reception = low output.

So, what we want is base stations close to us.

This is however something people who are worried about cancer risk often opposes. Most often they argues that the output power of the base station is hundreds of times higher than our phones. This is correct, but the field power of the transmitted signal get very low when we move away from the antenna, the energy spreads out by the inverse-square law and become extremely low at the distances we usually have to them.

This law is also true when we think about the field power from our neighbors phone on the bus. It's him who receives the radio electromagnetic radiation, not you.

See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-square_law
http://www.emfwise.com/distance.php
https://www.osha.gov/SLT...emo/electromagnetic.html (Appendix B)
 
pitubo
#44 Posted : 1/11/2015 10:11:32 PM

dysfunctional word machine

Senior Member

Posts: 1831
Joined: 15-Mar-2014
Last visit: 11-Jun-2018
Location: at the center of my universe
benzyme wrote:
254 nm (253.7) is in the UV spectrum, not microwave. UV-C can create ozone from oxygen in air, that is ionization.

In a way this is just nitpicking, but I checked my numbers a bit, to make sure I'm talking out of the right side of my body.

About what is ionizing radiation, eg wikipedia states it as starting at 10 to 30 eV, and as a reference it gives: http://transition.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Engineering_Technology/Documents/bulletins/oet56/oet56e4.pdf

Quoting from that document:
Federal Communications Commission, Office of Engineering & Technology
OET BULLETIN 56, Fourth Edition, August 1999
"Questions and Answers about Biological Effects and Potential Hazards of Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields"

OET bull. 56, 4th ed. page 5 wrote:
A single quantum event (absorption of an X-ray or gamma-ray photon) can cause ionization and subsequent biological damage due to the high energy content of the photon, which would be in excess of 10 eV (considered to be the minimum photon energy capable of causing ionization).


As regards ozone generation, the internet, through mostly wikipedia, tells me that ozone production starts at 240 nm.

Back on topic of cellphone radiation, the same FCC document also states:

OET bull. 56, 4th ed. page 9 wrote:

At the present time, much of the non-military research on biological effects of RF energy in the U.S. is being funded by industry organizations such as Motorola, Inc.

It is so good to know that so much research into this subject is done by independent parties with obviously no conflict of interest!
 
benzyme
#45 Posted : 1/11/2015 10:20:12 PM

analytical chemist

Moderator | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertExtreme Chemical expert | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertChemical expert | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expertSenior Member | Skills: Analytical equipment, Chemical master expert

Posts: 7463
Joined: 21-May-2008
Last visit: 03-Mar-2024
Location: the lab
pitubo wrote:
As regards ozone generation, the internet, through mostly wikipedia, tells me that ozone production starts at 240 nm.


weird, maybe my nose deceives me... because I smell the same scent from 253.7 nm transmission that I did from 28KV arcing from ESI. smells like....ozone.

but you read it on wiki, so it must be true.
"Nothing is true, everything is permitted." ~ hassan i sabbah
"Experiments are the only means of attaining knowledge at our disposal. The rest is poetry, imagination." -Max Planck
 
pitubo
#46 Posted : 1/11/2015 10:22:43 PM

dysfunctional word machine

Senior Member

Posts: 1831
Joined: 15-Mar-2014
Last visit: 11-Jun-2018
Location: at the center of my universe
Knarkkorven wrote:
This is however something people who are worried about cancer risk often opposes. Most often they argues that the output power of the base station is hundreds of times higher than our phones. This is correct, but the field power of the transmitted signal get very low when we move away from the antenna, the energy spreads out by the inverse-square law and become extremely low at the distances we usually have to them.

Quite often I see apartment buildings with cell phone antennas on the roof. People living on the top floor could be sleeping three meters away from these antenna units. AFAIK there is no epidemiological data proving that these people are dying in significant number, but I sure would not trade places with them.

One time I tried to explain to my brother the Faraday cage effect. For a tangible example experiment I asked him to put his cell phone in the microwave oven with door closed. Next I dialed his cell phone number from the house's land line, expecting to not get a response. To my astonishment, the cell phone started to ring from within the closed microwave! I am not sure what to think of this...
 
Knarkkorven
#47 Posted : 1/11/2015 11:10:10 PM

DMT-Nexus member


Posts: 42
Joined: 02-Jan-2015
Last visit: 19-Aug-2017
Location: Sweden
Quote:
Quite often I see apartment buildings with cell phone antennas on the roof. People living on the top floor could be sleeping three meters away from these antenna units. AFAIK there is no epidemiological data proving that these people are dying in significant number, but I sure would not trade places with them.

I don't think this is a big problem either, but mostly because antennas placed on roof tops direct most power toward the sides and not straight up/down.
Look at this picture: http://lessons2all.com/images/antenna.jpg

With wall mounted antennas, they use sector antennas made to emit all power within 60-180 degrees out from the wall, and almost nothing into the wall/room behind it.

Quote:
One time I tried to explain to my brother the Faraday cage effect. For a tangible example experiment I asked him to put his cell phone in the microwave oven with door closed. Next I dialed his cell phone number from the house's land line, expecting to not get a response. To my astonishment, the cell phone started to ring from within the closed microwave! I am not sure what to think of this...


The net covering the microwave oven window are not enough to keep all microwaves out. Anyway, another reason for your brothers mobile to have reception is that itself switches between frequency bands and modulation/telecom standards. If the reception disappear on the 3G/4G frequency bands between 1900-2500MHz inside the microwave, it's perhaps probably better on the bands between 700-850 MHz.
 
pitubo
#48 Posted : 1/12/2015 2:40:17 AM

dysfunctional word machine

Senior Member

Posts: 1831
Joined: 15-Mar-2014
Last visit: 11-Jun-2018
Location: at the center of my universe
Knarkkorven wrote:
.. antennas placed on roof tops direct most power toward the sides and not straight up/down.
Look at this picture: http://lessons2all.com/images/antenna.jpg

That picture actually points out that the irradiated power does not go out cleanly only towards the sides. Close to the antenna, it goes many directions, some lobes go almost straight downwards.

Knarkkorven wrote:
pitubo wrote:
.. Faraday cage .. cell phone started to ring from within the closed microwave! I am not sure what to think of this...

The net covering the microwave oven window are not enough to keep all microwaves out. Anyway, another reason for your brothers mobile to have reception is that itself switches between frequency bands and modulation/telecom standards. If the reception disappear on the 3G/4G frequency bands between 1900-2500MHz inside the microwave, it's perhaps probably better on the bands between 700-850 MHz.

This happened more than ten years ago, perhaps even fifteen, so the cell phone technologies involved are 2G.

But that should not be relevant. As I understand the Faraday cage, no signals should significantly leak through, certainly not signals of lower frequency than the microwave's operating frequency, for which the screen is designed.

I might consider the possibility that the GSM base station has enough power and the cell phone antenna is sensitive enough for it to receive some very weak signal inside the cage. But how could the signal from the cell phone escape the Faraday cage of the microwave oven and still have enough power to reach the GSM base station?

I actually checked that particular microwave oven by holding a fluorescent bulb close to it while it was operating, in order to find any major radiation leaks. It did not light up though.
 
universecannon
#49 Posted : 1/12/2015 3:20:23 AM

โ˜‚

Moderator | Skills: harmalas, melatonin, trip advice, lucid dreaming

Posts: 5257
Joined: 29-Jul-2009
Last visit: 24-Aug-2024
Location: 🌊
I don't know, but cell phone companies certainly are.



<Ringworm>hehehe, it's all fun and games till someone loses an "I"
 
PREV123
 
Users browsing this forum
Guest (4)

DMT-Nexus theme created by The Traveler
This page was generated in 0.028 seconds.