Effetti biologici delle onde radar sull'organismo umano - Parte II
P. Battarra · 1961
Scientists were studying radar's biological effects on humans in 1961, long before today's wireless revolution.
Plain English Summary
This 1961 Italian research by Dr. Battarra examined the biological effects of radar waves on the human body, representing early scientific investigation into microwave radiation health impacts. The study was part of a multi-part series exploring how radar emissions affect human physiology. This research emerged during the post-war period when radar technology was expanding rapidly in military and civilian applications.
Why This Matters
This 1961 study represents pioneering research into radar's biological effects, conducted when microwave technology was still relatively new. What makes this particularly relevant today is that radar operates in similar frequency ranges to many modern wireless devices - your WiFi router, cell phone, and microwave oven all emit radiation in the same general microwave spectrum that concerned researchers six decades ago. The fact that scientists were investigating radar's biological effects in 1961 underscores that concerns about microwave radiation aren't new or fringe - they've been part of legitimate scientific inquiry for over 60 years. Today's ubiquitous wireless environment means we're all exposed to microwave radiation levels that would have been unimaginable when Dr. Battarra conducted this research, yet safety standards haven't kept pace with either the science or our dramatically increased exposure levels.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{effetti_biologici_delle_onde_radar_sull_organismo_umano_parte_ii_g6945,
author = {P. Battarra},
title = {Effetti biologici delle onde radar sull'organismo umano - Parte II},
year = {1961},
}