ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSE AND ITS EFFECTS ON SYSTEMS
Robert A. Pfeffer · 1982
Military recognition of EMP system vulnerability highlights electromagnetic fields' proven ability to disrupt electrical systems.
Plain English Summary
This 1982 military course outline focused on electromagnetic pulse (EMP) effects on electronic systems and defense strategies. The training covered how intense electromagnetic bursts can disable or damage electronic equipment and infrastructure. While aimed at military system protection, it highlights the vulnerability of modern electronics to electromagnetic interference.
Why This Matters
This military training document from 1982 reveals something crucial that's often overlooked in EMF health discussions: electronic systems are inherently vulnerable to electromagnetic interference. The military has long recognized that intense electromagnetic pulses can disrupt or destroy electronic equipment, which raises important questions about chronic, low-level EMF exposure effects on biological systems. While an EMP represents an extreme electromagnetic event far beyond everyday exposures, the fundamental principle remains the same - electromagnetic fields can interfere with electrical systems. Your body operates on bioelectrical signals for everything from heart rhythm to brain function. The military's decades-long focus on protecting electronic systems from electromagnetic interference underscores a reality the telecommunications industry often downplays: electromagnetic fields have measurable, predictable effects on electrical systems.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{electromagnetic_pulse_and_its_effects_on_systems_g4346,
author = {Robert A. Pfeffer},
title = {ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSE AND ITS EFFECTS ON SYSTEMS},
year = {1982},
}