Determination and Elimination of Hazardous Microwave Fields Aboard Naval Ships
Zorach R. Glaser, Glenn M. Heimer · 1971
Navy ships required systematic microwave hazard control in 1971, yet civilians today lack similar protection protocols despite widespread EMF exposure.
Plain English Summary
This 1971 Navy study examined microwave radiation hazards to personnel aboard ships from communication, radar, and navigation equipment. Researchers developed methods to predict, measure, and control potentially dangerous electromagnetic fields in the unique shipboard environment. The work established early protocols for protecting military personnel from occupational microwave exposure.
Why This Matters
This early military research reveals that concerns about microwave radiation exposure aren't new. The Navy recognized potential health hazards from shipboard electromagnetic equipment decades before widespread civilian wireless technology adoption. What's particularly significant is that military personnel faced concentrated exposures from multiple high-powered sources in confined spaces, creating a natural laboratory for understanding cumulative EMF effects. The reality is that today's civilians often experience similar multi-source exposures from WiFi routers, cell towers, smart meters, and personal devices, yet we lack comparable systematic hazard evaluation protocols for everyday environments. This study demonstrates that protective measures are technically feasible when organizations prioritize personnel safety over convenience.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{determination_and_elimination_of_hazardous_microwave_fields_aboard_naval_ships_g5143,
author = {Zorach R. Glaser and Glenn M. Heimer},
title = {Determination and Elimination of Hazardous Microwave Fields Aboard Naval Ships},
year = {1971},
}