SURVEY OF SELECTED INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS OF MICROWAVE ENERGY
Authors not listed · 1970
Industrial microwave use in 1970 was controlled and limited, unlike today's constant consumer exposure.
Plain English Summary
This 1970 government survey documented industrial uses of microwave energy across various sectors. The report cataloged how businesses were deploying microwave technology for heating, drying, and processing applications. This early documentation provides baseline data on microwave deployment before widespread consumer adoption.
Why This Matters
This government survey represents a crucial snapshot of microwave technology deployment at the dawn of the wireless age. In 1970, microwave energy was primarily an industrial tool, used in controlled environments with trained operators and safety protocols. The reality is that within just a few decades, similar microwave frequencies would become ubiquitous in consumer devices, from microwave ovens to WiFi routers to cell phones. What this means for you is understanding how dramatically our exposure landscape has changed. Industrial microwave applications typically operated at much higher power levels than consumer devices, but they were contained and limited to specific locations. Today's challenge is the constant, low-level exposure from multiple sources that surround us daily. The science demonstrates that cumulative exposure matters, and this historical perspective shows how rapidly we've transformed from occasional industrial exposure to continuous consumer exposure without adequate long-term health studies.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{survey_of_selected_industrial_applications_of_microwave_energy_g4244,
author = {Unknown},
title = {SURVEY OF SELECTED INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS OF MICROWAVE ENERGY},
year = {1970},
}