Unknown authors
This conference paper examined how microwave electromagnetic fields interact with biological systems, specifically focusing on effects on the nervous system and red blood cell membranes. The research explored the fundamental mechanisms by which microwave radiation affects living tissue at the cellular level. This type of foundational research helps scientists understand the biological pathways through which EMF exposure may impact human health.
Ronald W. P. King, Glenn S. Smith
This technical report examined electric field probes and their applications in electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) testing. The research focused on probe design, antenna characteristics, and dielectric properties relevant to microwave frequencies. While primarily an engineering study, this work has implications for biomedical applications where accurate EMF measurement is critical.
JOHN E. BOYSEN
This early research by Boysen investigated both heating (hyperthermic) and tissue damage (pathologic) effects from electromagnetic radiation at 350 megahertz frequency in laboratory animals. The study examined how microwave radiation causes biological changes beyond simple thermal heating. This represents foundational research into the harmful effects of electromagnetic exposure on living tissue.
Narda Microwave Corporation
This technical document describes the NARDA Model 8609 electromagnetic radiation monitor, a specialized instrument designed to measure microwave field strength using an isotropic probe. The device represents professional-grade equipment used to assess electromagnetic radiation levels in various environments. Such monitoring equipment plays a crucial role in documenting actual EMF exposures that people encounter daily.
Unknown authors
This technical report introduces specialized microwave frequency counters capable of measuring signals up to 40 GHz. These instruments represent the type of equipment needed to accurately assess microwave radiation exposure from modern wireless devices and industrial sources.
Jaski
This technical study by Jaski focused on developing methods to detect and measure microwave radiation hazards, particularly using thermistor-based dosimetry systems to assess power density levels. The research addressed the critical need for accurate detection equipment to identify potentially harmful microwave exposures in various environments. This work represents early efforts to establish proper measurement protocols for microwave radiation safety assessment.
John Roman
This technical report examined radio frequency hazards to human health, with particular focus on microwave heating effects and lens opacities (cataracts). The research documented biological effects from RF exposure and assessed potential health risks from electromagnetic radiation.
T. C. Rozzell, C. C. Johnson, O. P. Gandhi
Researchers developed two specialized fiber-optic probes that can measure microwave power density inside biological tissue and monitor temperature during microwave exposure. These probes don't interfere with the microwave field or create hot spots, enabling measurements that were previously impossible. This represents a significant advancement in accurately studying how microwave radiation affects living tissue.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed rats to 1.3 GHz pulse-modulated microwave radiation for 2-3 weeks, 3 hours daily, at power levels up to 2.6 mW/g to test effects on the blood-brain barrier. They used sodium barbital absorption rates as a marker but found no significant changes. This contradicts other studies showing microwave radiation can compromise the blood-brain barrier at non-thermal levels.
Unknown authors
Researchers developed a fiber-optic temperature probe using gallium arsenide sensors that can accurately measure temperature during microwave hyperthermia treatments without interfering with the electromagnetic fields. The probe uses infrared light at 907 nanometers and can measure temperatures from 15-55°C, making it suitable for cancer treatment monitoring where traditional metal probes would create dangerous interference.
Unknown authors
Researchers tested whether 2450 MHz microwave radiation could open the blood-brain barrier in rats using a special direct contact applicator for precise exposure control. Even at power levels up to 28 mW/g in brain tissue for 20 minutes, the microwaves did not cause barrier opening or brain staining. This finding suggests the blood-brain barrier remains intact under these specific microwave exposure conditions.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed male rats to 1.29 GHz microwave radiation at 15 mW/cm² for 90 minutes and measured stress hormone levels in their blood. The exposed rats showed dramatically elevated corticosterone (stress hormone) levels that were 6-8 times higher than unexposed rats after 75 minutes. This study demonstrates that microwave radiation can trigger significant stress responses in the body at frequencies close to those used by cell phones.
Unknown authors
Researchers developed a broadband microwave applicator operating from 150 MHz to 1100 MHz designed to deliver focused energy to deep-seated tumors for cancer hyperthermia therapy. The device uses a specialized horn design filled with a high-dielectric liquid to penetrate deeper into tissue while preventing surface overheating. This represents engineering work to optimize medical microwave delivery rather than health effects research.
Unknown authors
This technical report measured electromagnetic activity naturally produced by the human body across frequencies from 1 kHz to 2 GHz, using advanced equipment including microwave radiometers and medical monitoring devices. The research documented the body's own electromagnetic emissions, including thermal radiation and bioelectrical signals from organs like the heart and brain. This work helps establish baseline measurements for understanding how external EMF sources interact with the body's natural electromagnetic environment.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed simulated muscle tissue to pulsed microwave radar at 5.62 GHz and discovered that the radiation created pressure waves that traveled through the material at 1460 meters per second. The study found these microwave-induced waves could potentially focus and create resonance effects in biological tissues under certain conditions.
Unknown authors
Scientists studied how microwave radiation is absorbed by the human body using layered models that include skin, fat, and muscle tissues. They discovered that at 1.2 GHz, these body layers create a resonance effect that doubles radiation absorption compared to simpler models. This finding suggests that realistic body composition significantly affects how much electromagnetic energy we absorb from wireless devices.
Unknown authors
Scientists exposed 236 pregnant mice to 148 MHz radiofrequency radiation for one hour daily throughout pregnancy at power levels similar to wireless devices. The exposed mice produced significantly lighter offspring compared to unexposed controls, though no visible birth defects were observed. This suggests RF radiation during pregnancy may affect fetal development even at relatively low exposure levels.
Unknown authors
Scientists tested microwave radiation exposure on a life-sized rhesus monkey model using 1.29 GHz radar signals to measure how energy is absorbed in body tissues. They found that while some areas showed expected surface heating, certain internal regions created dangerous 'hot spots' with three times higher energy absorption than the surface. This reveals how microwave radiation can create unpredictable heating patterns deep inside the body.
Unknown authors
Researchers tested whether microwave technology could detect early lung fluid buildup (pulmonary edema) by using isolated dog lungs in laboratory conditions. They found that microwave signals immediately changed as water content in the lungs increased, proving this method could accurately detect the earliest stages of fluid accumulation. This validates microwave detection as a potential medical diagnostic tool for lung conditions.
Unknown authors
Researchers tested whether implanted microwave coils operating at 9.3 GHz could heat and destroy tumors in mice. The treatment heated tumors to 44°C for 30 minutes, achieving complete long-term cures in 44% of mice with leg tumors. This demonstrates that focused microwave energy can be an effective cancer treatment when precisely targeted.
Unknown authors
Researchers developed a sophisticated method to expose cells to extremely high microwave radiation (320-450 mW/cm²) at 41.80 GHz and 73.95 GHz while preventing heating through rapid medium circulation. After one hour of exposure, they found no effects on cell structure or protein/RNA synthesis, suggesting thermal effects may be the primary mechanism of microwave biological impact.
Unknown authors
Researchers measured temperature increases in monkey heads exposed to microwave radiation at 2.5 and 1.2 GHz frequencies, comparing results between living anesthetized monkeys, cadaver heads, and tissue-equivalent spheres. The study used high-precision temperature monitoring to track how radiofrequency energy is absorbed and distributed in brain tissue. This research provides direct measurements of thermal effects from microwave exposure in primate heads.
Unknown authors
Researchers tested an invasive microwave probe system designed to create localized hyperthermia (controlled heating) in dog brain tissue, likely for cancer treatment applications. The study focused on measuring thermal effects when microwave energy is delivered directly into brain tissue through an implanted antenna. This research explores how microwaves can be precisely controlled to heat specific areas of the brain for therapeutic purposes.
Unknown authors
Researchers exposed pregnant rats to 2450 MHz microwave radiation (500 μW/cm²) for 20 hours daily during pregnancy. The exposed offspring showed seven times higher death rates, delayed eye opening, temperature regulation problems, and lasting behavioral and growth changes into adulthood. The study demonstrates that prenatal microwave exposure can cause significant developmental problems even when no effects are visible at birth.
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Researchers used 915 MHz microwave diathermy on healthy volunteers' thigh muscles while measuring blood flow at different depths. They found blood flow increased dramatically from 2 to 32 ml/min/100g, with deeper muscle tissue showing different response patterns than surface tissue. This demonstrates how microwave energy penetrates and affects human tissue circulation.