Apple iPhone 17 Air Review: Ultra-thin elegance meets near-limit SAR—great iPhone, but don’t confuse compliance with safety
Resources
Phone Reviews
Mar 5, 2026
The iPhone 17 Air is a design flex: a 5.64 mm ultra-thin iPhone with a gorgeous 6.6-inch Super Retina XDR OLED and A19-class speed. But RF-conscious buyers should pause—its hotspot and simultaneous SAR readings sit essentially at the FCC’s 1.6 W/kg ceiling. It’s a strong phone that demands safer-use discipline.
2026 Evidence Snapshot: Non‑Thermal RF Bioeffects Across 6 GHz, 3.5 GHz, 2.45 GHz, and 28 GHz—Why Heat‑Only Safety Limits Don’t Track Biology
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 13 studies (2026) spanning 6 GHz, 3.5 GHz, 2.45 GHz Wi‑Fi, 28 GHz mmWave, and real‑world base‑station proximity and smartphone use. Across mechanistic, animal, and observational evidence, multiple biologi…
2026 EMF Research Snapshot: Non‑Thermal Biological Effects Across 6 GHz, 3.5 GHz, 2.45 GHz Wi‑Fi, and 28 GHz mmWave—Why Thermal‑Only Safety Limits Are Not Enough
Research
Effect Synthesis
Mar 1, 2026
Synthesis of 12 studies (2026) linking RF/EMF exposures and wireless tech use to oxidative stress, apoptosis, reproductive harm, kidney changes, sleep disruption, and base-station symptom patterns—supporting precautio…
Non-thermal biological effects of radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation: Mechanistic insights into male reproductive vulnerability in the era of ubiquitous exposure
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2025
This narrative review discusses proposed non-thermal mechanisms by which chronic, low-intensity RF-EMR from ubiquitous wireless sources may affect male reproductive health. It highlights oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, impaired testosterone synthesis/steroidogenesis, and declines in sperm quality as…
Lipidomic alteration and stress-defense mechanism of soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans in response to extremely low-frequency electromagnetic field exposure.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2019
This animal (nematode) study exposed Caenorhabditis elegans to 50 Hz, 3 mT extremely low-frequency EMF and assessed multi-omics responses. The authors report significant lipidomic, proteomic, and transcriptomic alterations, including increased triacylglycerols. Pathway analyses suggest disrupted lipid metabolism,…