REFERENCE DATA FOR RADIOFREQUENCY EMISSION HAZARD ANALYSIS
Richard A. Tell · 1972
This 1972 government research established RF hazard analysis methods still used today, despite dramatically increased wireless exposure levels.
Plain English Summary
This 1972 government report by Richard A. Tell established reference data standards for analyzing radiofrequency emission hazards. The research provided foundational technical guidelines for assessing RF exposure risks during the early development of wireless technologies. This work helped establish the scientific framework that regulatory agencies still use today to evaluate electromagnetic field safety.
Why This Matters
This government report represents a pivotal moment in EMF safety research, published just as wireless technologies were beginning to proliferate. The science demonstrates that even in 1972, researchers recognized the need for systematic hazard analysis of radiofrequency emissions. What makes this particularly significant is the timing - this foundational work established reference standards during an era when wireless exposure was minimal compared to today's ubiquitous RF environment.
The reality is that the reference data and analytical methods developed in this early government research became the backbone of current safety standards. Yet our daily RF exposure has increased exponentially since 1972, from occasional radio and television broadcasts to constant WiFi, cellular, and Bluetooth signals. Put simply, we're applying 50-year-old hazard analysis frameworks to a completely transformed electromagnetic landscape.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{reference_data_for_radiofrequency_emission_hazard_analysis_g5566,
author = {Richard A. Tell},
title = {REFERENCE DATA FOR RADIOFREQUENCY EMISSION HAZARD ANALYSIS},
year = {1972},
}