Power density measures how much electromagnetic energy passes through a given area, expressed in watts per square meter (W/m²) or milliwatts per square centimeter (mW/cm²).
This unit is primarily used for measuring higher-frequency RF radiation from sources like cell towers, WiFi routers, and radar systems rather than low-frequency EMF from power lines.
Power density is the key measurement for understanding radiofrequency exposure. It tells you how much RF energy is present in a given area—essentially, the intensity of the wireless radiation at your location.
The standard units are watts per square meter (W/m²) or, more commonly for practical measurements, microwatts per square centimeter (μW/cm²). These units work better for RF because at higher frequencies, electric and magnetic fields are coupled together and travel as waves, making power density a more useful metric than separate E and H field measurements.
Typical exposures vary enormously. Background RF in rural areas might be under 0.001 μW/cm². Near a WiFi router at one meter, readings might be 1-10 μW/cm². Close to an active cell phone during a call, levels can reach 100-1000 μW/cm² or higher.
Safety standards also use power density. The FCC limit for general public RF exposure is 1,000 μW/cm² for typical cell phone frequencies—though many researchers and some countries advocate for limits orders of magnitude lower based on studies showing biological effects well below thermal thresholds.
For practical EMF reduction, understanding power density helps you prioritize. A cell phone against your head creates vastly higher power density than a WiFi router across the room, even though the router runs continuously. Distance matters enormously—power density decreases rapidly as you move away from the source.
When shopping for RF meters, look for models that display readings in μW/cm² or μW/m² for the most useful measurements of wireless radiation exposure.