RADHAZ (RF RADIATION HAZARD) INSTRUMENTATION
Authors not listed · 1962
This 1962 GE report pioneered RF hazard measurement methods that remain essential for assessing microwave exposure risks today.
Plain English Summary
This 1962 General Electric technical report focused on developing instrumentation to measure RF radiation hazards and assess personnel exposure to microwave radiation. The study addressed early concerns about workplace safety as microwave technology expanded in military and industrial applications. This represents foundational work in establishing methods to detect and quantify RF exposure risks.
Why This Matters
This 1962 report represents a crucial moment in EMF safety history when industry and military organizations first began systematically addressing RF radiation hazards. General Electric's focus on instrumentation development shows early recognition that microwave exposure posed measurable risks to personnel. The reality is that six decades later, we're still grappling with many of the same fundamental questions about RF safety that this report attempted to address through better measurement tools.
What makes this particularly relevant today is that the microwave frequencies this research targeted are now ubiquitous in our daily lives through WiFi, cell phones, and countless wireless devices. The science demonstrates that accurate exposure assessment remains as critical now as it was in 1962, yet modern safety standards still rely heavily on thermal effects while largely ignoring the biological impacts that contemporary research continues to document.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{radhaz_rf_radiation_hazard_instrumentation_g4843,
author = {Unknown},
title = {RADHAZ (RF RADIATION HAZARD) INSTRUMENTATION},
year = {1962},
}