Flora and fauna: how nonhuman species interact with natural and man-made EMF at ecosystem levels and public policy recommendations
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2025
This review discusses how increasing ambient nonionizing EMF (0–300 GHz), particularly RF from modern wireless technologies and satellites, may affect flora and fauna at ecosystem levels. It states that many nonhuman species rely on electro/magneto-reception and that even low-intensity EMF exposures are capable of…
Investigation of fetal exposure to electromagnetic waves between 2.45 and 5 GHz during pregnancy
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2025
This dosimetry study simulated fetal RF-EMF exposure between 2.45 and 5 GHz during the second trimester, estimating SAR10g in fetal brain and lungs. The presence of a belly-button piercing increased SAR, with maxima reported at 2.45 GHz (16 mW/kg in lungs; 14 mW/kg in brain). Despite these increases, all SAR values…
Nonionizing Electromagnetic Field: A Promising Alternative for Growing Control Yeast.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2021
This laboratory study examined radiofrequency EMF exposure between 1 and 5.9 GHz as a method to control yeast growth relevant to food spoilage. The authors report reduced yeast viability at all tested frequencies and note that antenna-to-sample distance affected the outcome. Electron microscopy findings are described…
Cell hydration as a biomarker for estimation of biological effects of nonionizing radiation on cells and organisms.
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2014
This comparative study examined how distilled water pretreated by different nonionizing radiation modalities (mechanical vibration/infrasound, static magnetic field, ELF EMF, and microwave) affected hydration of barley seeds in dormant versus germination periods. The authors report greater sensitivity of hydration to…
Multifocal Breast Cancer in Young Women with Prolonged Contact between Their Breasts and Their Cellular Phones
Research
RF Safe Research Library
Jan 1, 2013
This 2013 case series describes four young women (ages 21–39) with multifocal invasive breast cancer who reportedly carried smartphones directly against their breasts in their brassieres for prolonged periods over several years. Tumors were reported to occur in areas immediately underlying phone contact, with imaging…