This is a very good question.

There's a myriad of opinions on the topic of non-ionizing radiation
hazards, some justified and others not.  When I read an article on this
topic the first thing I want to try to understand is who wrote it and what
is their motivation for writing it.  Not saying there's anything nefarious
going on, I just want to understand some background that will help me
interpret what the writer is saying and why they're saying it.  And then
there's the standards, how they were developed, what they are based on,
plus their validity.  Every country seems to have one, some are identical
while others are different.

The noted article is very interesting but the article referenced in it is
even more interesting because it addresses the topic more quantitatively
and brings some standards into focus for comparison.  Here's the link to
the referenced article for those who want to go directly to it:

*5G Communication Systems and Radio Frequency Exposure Limits*:
https://futurenetworks.ieee.org/tech-focus/september-2019/5g-communications-systems-and-radiofrequency-exposure-limits?highlight=WyJzeXN0ZW1zIiwicmFkaW9mcmVxdWVuY3kiLCI1ZyIsIjVnJ3MiLCInNWciLCJjb21tdW5pY2F0aW9ucyIsImV4cG9zdXJlIiwibGltaXRzIiwiNWcgY29tbXVuaWNhdGlvbnMiLCJleHBvc3VyZSBsaW1pdHMiXQ==

About 10 years ago when I worked for a major military defense contractor I
had to investigate a potential non-ionizing radiation hazard at a small
production facility where a ground level transmitting antenna was located
external but near to the building.  The antenna was there first, when the
building was empty, then later there was a need to establish a production
facility in the building, of course with people inside.  At the time I used
the C95*.*1 (2005) standard as my guide.  When I was done I used the
collected test data to establish a keep out zone around the antenna.  In
the end I doubled the keep out zone radius to account for whatever unknown
uncertainty that might exist in my analysis.  There's uncertainty with my
measurements and there's uncertainty with the standard exposure limits, and
that's why I doubled the keep out zone.

There are a lot of factors to consider relative to 5G radiation hazards:
frequency, radiation pattern, power level, distance, obstacles, exposure
time, plus most importantly the effect on the human body, much of which is
not well known (my opinion).  And no doubt there are other factors that I
can't think of right now.  I am hoping that all those directly involved
with expanding the 5G technology use scientific methods to develop safety
measures that work to minimize the exposure and potential adverse effects
on the human body.

Just my 2 cents.

Manny Barron
EMC Engineer




On Thu, Oct 14, 2021 at 11:24 AM Richard Nute <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> *https://spectrum.ieee.org/will-5g-be-bad-for-our-health*
> <https://spectrum.ieee.org/will-5g-be-bad-for-our-health>
>
>
>
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