RESPONSE OF NONSPHERICAL BIOLOGICAL PARTICLES TO ALTERNATING ELECTRIC FIELDS
M. SAITO, H. P. SCHWAN, G. SCHWARZ · 1966
Biological particles actively reorient themselves when exposed to changing electromagnetic frequencies, revealing complex cellular responses to EMF.
Plain English Summary
This 1966 laboratory study examined how biological particles of different shapes respond to alternating electric fields. Researchers found that as the frequency changes, particles can suddenly jump to new orientations or gradually shift position, demonstrating that living matter responds dynamically to electromagnetic fields.
Why This Matters
This foundational research from 1966 established a critical principle: biological matter doesn't just passively absorb electromagnetic energy-it actively responds and reorients based on field characteristics. The finding that particles can experience sudden orientation jumps as frequencies change reveals the complex, non-linear ways EMF interacts with living systems. What makes this particularly relevant today is that our modern environment exposes us to constantly shifting frequencies from WiFi, cell towers, and smart devices. Unlike the controlled laboratory conditions of this study, we're surrounded by a chaotic mix of frequencies that are continuously changing. This research suggests our cells and tissues may be constantly reorienting and responding to these shifting electromagnetic environments in ways we're only beginning to understand.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{response_of_nonspherical_biological_particles_to_alternating_electric_fields_g6866,
author = {M. SAITO and H. P. SCHWAN and G. SCHWARZ},
title = {RESPONSE OF NONSPHERICAL BIOLOGICAL PARTICLES TO ALTERNATING ELECTRIC FIELDS},
year = {1966},
}