Die Wirkung von HF-Strahlung auf lebende Organismen
CH. BODEN, H.-J. POMPE · 1962
Early 1962 research established that microwave radiation affects living tissue in frequency-dependent ways, laying groundwork for today's safety standards.
Plain English Summary
This 1962 review examined how high-frequency (microwave) radiation affects living organisms, focusing on how different frequencies are absorbed by skin and underlying tissues. The study found that energy absorption varies by frequency and discussed early safety guidelines from various institutions.
Why This Matters
This historical review represents some of the earliest scientific recognition that microwave radiation affects biological systems in frequency-dependent ways. Published in 1962, it established foundational understanding that different frequencies penetrate and heat tissues differently - a principle that remains central to EMF safety standards today. What's particularly significant is that researchers six decades ago were already documenting biological effects and establishing the need for exposure limits. The study's focus on tissue heating and energy absorption laid groundwork for current specific absorption rate (SAR) limits, though we now know biological effects can occur through non-thermal mechanisms as well. This early work demonstrates that concerns about microwave radiation's biological impact aren't new - they've been documented in peer-reviewed literature for over 60 years.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{die_wirkung_von_hf_strahlung_auf_lebende_organismen_g5885,
author = {CH. BODEN and H.-J. POMPE},
title = {Die Wirkung von HF-Strahlung auf lebende Organismen},
year = {1962},
}