Extremely low frequency (ELF) refers to electromagnetic fields with frequencies between 3 Hz and 300 Hz. This range includes the 50/60 Hz fields produced by electrical power systems.
ELF fields are generated wherever electricity flows—power lines, home wiring, and virtually every electrical appliance emit ELF radiation.
Extremely low frequency, commonly abbreviated ELF, describes the lowest frequency range of the electromagnetic spectrum that we encounter from human-made sources. While the technical definition spans 3-300 Hz, the most relevant frequency is 50 or 60 Hz—the frequency of alternating current in electrical grids worldwide (60 Hz in North America, 50 Hz in most other countries).
In practical terms, ELF fields surround us wherever electricity is used. Power lines, home wiring, refrigerators, hairdryers, electric blankets—anything plugged in or running on electricity generates ELF magnetic and electric fields.
The key point about ELF radiation: it behaves differently than higher-frequency EMF like WiFi or cell phone signals. ELF fields don’t radiate through space the way radio waves do. Instead, they exist close to their source and diminish rapidly with distance. This is why the magnetic field from your bedside lamp drops off significantly just a few feet away.
The health conversation around ELF focuses primarily on magnetic fields, measured in milligauss (mG) or microtesla (μT). The International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified ELF magnetic fields as possibly carcinogenic based on epidemiological studies linking high exposure to childhood leukemia.
For reducing ELF exposure, distance is your friend. Moving your bed away from the wall with electrical panels, keeping electric alarm clocks at arm’s length, and avoiding electric blankets during sleep are practical steps that can meaningfully reduce nighttime ELF exposure.