Another Reason to be Annoyed by Cell Phones 427
lotussuper7 writes: "This story at newscientist (free, no registration, unlike the NY Times) has some insight into the amount of RF you may be getting from all those cell phones people around you are using. Might be time to buy a cell phone jammer."
ECM (Score:4, Insightful)
If you don't like cell phones, then go find somewhere that doesn't have them.
Re:ECM (Score:2, Interesting)
Given the current popularity of mobile phones, you'd be hard pushed to find a "phone free zone".
Besides, the argument (and I suppose it's exactly that at the moment until we get solid uniform proof) is that it's damaging to one's health. Using that analogy, would you tell non-smokers to find a smoke-free zone or put up & shut up?
Besides, mobile phones are not limited to RF poisoning: something which hasn't been mentioned is the damage to train users' ear drums when the entire carriage errupts in a shouting match of "ARE YOU STILL THERE? HELLO? HELLO?..." when the train goes through a tunnel...
A cultural problem, not a technological problem (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not an RF expert but I am a physicist. As far as I know radiation can damage your cells in two ways:
a) Direct heating
b) Ionization
The latter one is easy to dismiss by elementary physics. Unlike in the gamma radiation, the photons of the cellphone microwave radiation simply don't carry enough energy to damage the DNA strands. Hell, microwaves pack less punch per photon than the infrared (heat) radiation!
The heating argument is more difficult to deal with. In general, the power of the RF field is again far too weak to heat your brain significantly (=more than the temperature varies naturally). However, if several fields overlap in a certain way (a standing wave forms inside your skull), then I guess there might be a possibility for an interference "hotspot" to form. Again I think this is very unlikely. Even a small head movement or the movement of the radiation source will change the geometry and thus the interference inside your head.
Quite frankly I am surprised by the anti-cellphone mentality in this thread. Most of it seems to come from experiences with annoying cellphone users. However, that's not a problem with the cellphones. That's a cultural problem. People simply have not learnt the proper etiquette yet.
Where I live the cellphones have practically replaced the landline phones. If the adaptation of the cellphones continues at this rate, there will soon be a one cellphone per citizen -- and that includes the minors. When the use is this widespread, the people in general know how to switch their phones to silent mode for meetings, movies and concerts. Having your cellphone ring, for instance, in the middle of a movie is socially extremely bad behaviour. If you start talking on your phone in the theatre, you will get thrown out -- either by the theatre staff or by the rest of the audience.
Re:A cultural problem, not a technological problem (Score:3, Informative)
Let me add just a tad more information to this discussion.
As I recall from my E&M class (and I am an electronic engineer) the depth of penetration for an arriving wave is related to the wavelength(actually the energy content of the photon is what we're talking about..) So microwaves just don't penetrate that far in relative to something like 100Meter wave lengths.
Further, alot of the cell phones today are spread spectrum phones - so they spread their energy out - so the Watts/Hz is pretty small.
Lastly - when you consider the inverse square law that applies to radiation of RF, then the guy who has the phone against his head is ALOT more at risk that the guy standing next to him or someone standing down the car 5m away? The additive issues of even a dozen phones isn't likely to be an issue compared to the level you are exposed to with the phone next to you.
I would be REAL suspicious of this guy's work.
Re:ECM (Score:5, Insightful)
You can't escape them, so stop trying...
My great-grandfather was annoyed by cars. My grandfather was annoyed by the TV. He never like it except when he was watching it. My parents are annoyed by call waiting and so I still get busy signals. My wife is annoyed by cell phones. I'm sure my children's mega-PDA-communicator-multimedia-device will get on my nerves too.
Buy you know what? That's technology. Get used to it.
-Russ
Re:ECM (Score:3, Interesting)
We lived for thousands of years without:
Why on earth should they suddenly become essential?
The other day my friend called me on my mobile phone, from his mobile phone, because he'd just had an accident on his bike. I was able to call another friend (on their mobile phone) to arrange a car to go and get him.
Re:ECM (Score:3, Funny)
What about adobe bricks?
Re:ECM (Score:2)
- Antibiotics
- Sanitation
- Refrigeration
- Wheels
Nothing's biologically "essential" except food, water, and shelter. If you want a civilization, however, you need to set your standards a bit higher.
Re:ECM (Score:2)
No, it doesn't mean the mobile phone should or must be.
It does explain, though, the painfully obvious fact that just because we got along with something for thousands of years doesn't mean it can't become a necessity. Original parent implied that since he had gotten along without a cell phone for years then why would it be a necessity now? It's an absurd rhetorical question that should be marked "troll", if it hasn't been already.
Technically, the only necessities are air, water, and food.
However, for me a computer and Internet are necessities. I need them both to work and earn a living. They might not be considered necessities by many in the world, but they are to me. Perhaps a cell phone is a necessity to many others.
In fact, I would suggest that perhaps the original parent post said that a cell phone is not a necessity because he has no-one to talk to. Poor unsocial bastard. :)
Re:You missed the point... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:You took away my right to smoke (Score:2)
And the Cutesy Songy Ringtones get annoying after the 20th time in an hour
Just as a bit of a defence for those with "cutesy" songy ringtones : As anyone with a cellphone knows, the simplistic sine wave tones generated by todays cellphones are extremely hard to audio-locate, which is why you get the situation where 8 people all are reaching for their cell phones simultaneously. Instead I have my phone play a little song that I sent it from some website, and I know that if I hear that theme that it is overwhelmingly likely that it is my phone within the first three tones or so (versus the countless stock Nokia tone people). Mind you, 98% of the time I have my phone on silent anyways, and if I do have the ringer on it's on volume level 1 at most.
The telephone really is a fascinating part of our society: So many people are brought up believing that the telephone is instant attention from the receiving end. I personally almost never answer the telephone (that's what voicemail is for. Note that people who hate voicemail are usually the "BUT I'M TOO IMPORTANT FOR VOICEMAIL! WHERE ARE YOU! I NEED YOU UNDIVIDED ATTENTION NOW BECAUSE I'M SPECIAL AND SUPERCEDE ALL OTHER TASKS!"). Speaking of cell phones : What's with the people who always have the volume of the ringer on super-loud, and they yell into their cellphones? Totally unnecessary, and again I think it's a little too much self-importance.
Yeah, that'll help (Score:5, Insightful)
Reduce your exposure to RF emissions by carrying around a powerful RF transmitter! Sure, that'll do the trick.
Re:Yeah, that'll help (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yeah, that'll help (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, that'll help (Score:2)
.
Re:Yeah, that'll help (Score:3, Funny)
Re:*sighs deeply* Not true... (Score:2, Insightful)
Gadget gratia Geekus
Jouster
Re:*sighs deeply* Not true... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, that'll help (Score:2, Informative)
Here [computex.com.tw] are some specs and details of such a jamming device.
Re:Yeah, that'll help (Score:2)
Trains are usually very close to base stations, I don't know where you live, but here in metro Melbourne GSM coverage is probably better than normal along train lines (except some underground railway lines). The reason - to provide coverage to the often very crowded trains.
Another reason (Score:5, Funny)
How much RF will you soak up when you have a device in your pocket that will have to put out a 50-100 watt RF spike into every 1 khz of a 50-100 MHz wide frequency BAND? Your ass will melt. Besides: you're not soaking up that much RF from other people's mobiles, not compared to what they do, and if I were you I wouldn't worry so much about a few watts from a tower: if you want something RF to cry about, how about that 50+ kHz wide 50 MEGAWATT radio station that you live only a few miles away from, that's blasting you much harder than a tiny little cell phone tower. Sheesh!
I will agree with you, though, if you say a no-phone section ought to be created in resteraunts. You don't just drop your pants and crap on the floor at a restaurant, do you? No, you get up and excuse yourself and go to the bathroom. That's what people should do when the get or have to make a call in a busy social situ. Plus, all CP's should have a silent ringer.
Indeed, if you're in a restaurant, and someone starts gabbing and laughing on a cellphone right at his table, just go over to his table, pull down your pants, and take a shit right on his table, (preferably in his food, or his lap). When he says "hey!" Tell him, that that is what he is doing to your meal by yacking on his phone while you're trying to eat.
Just a suggestion anyway.
Re:Another reason (Score:2)
Some say it's because they talk louder on a phone than they do in normal conversation, but I don't see that - if a person is loud on the phone, then usually they are loud in face to face conversation too.
The annoyance of mobiles for me is the stupid ringtones. SET THEM TO VIBRATE people. I do use my phone quite a bit, but nobody ever hears it ring, nd I speak in a normal face to face conversation volume so it doesn't annoy people.
Re:Another reason (Score:2)
Hello - Yeah, I'm on the train... (Score:2, Funny)
Looks like a simulation (Score:4, Insightful)
It could be much less serious (or much more....).
Re:Looks like a simulation (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, and this is so much like the anti-RF crowd: "Let's conduct a simulation because we wouldn't understand a hard measurement if it hit us over the head." This policy began with the flawed assumptions of Wertheimer and Leper, who made one of the first studies indicating that powerlines might cause Lukemia. The problem was that they didn't measure the actual radiation --they assumed it would be propotional to the class of powerlines near each house. Wrong.
This policy of simulate instead of measure has continued to this day. And those who do measure often get it wrong. You see, none of them are RF engineers. One study using lab rats actually exposed the lab rats to 10 times the radiation level they thought they were using. Our esteemed researchers forgot to take the metal cage in to account...
The anti-RF crowd are mostly a lot of believers who think they have indentified a statistically insignificant danger and now they're looking for a theory to back it up. Instead they find statistical artifacts and use these spurious correlations to get more funding. The only known hazard of RF radiation are heating effects. Those who discover anything else deserve a Nobel Prize, if for nothing else, PHYSICS!
Jammers are illegal over here (Score:2)
cell phone jammer? no thanks... (Score:4, Funny)
No thanks, my cell phone came with a free jammer...it's called AT&T wireless service
Who gets the last laugh? (Score:5, Funny)
Just a myriad of uses for these things...
Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon [stumbleupon.com]
Cellular defence strategies (Score:2, Funny)
Get your multi frequency digital cell phone jammer here [cguard.com], or just skip the sissy stuff and build a disruptor [com.com].
really? (Score:2)
Ok, I am gonna ask a naive question here. I live in Hotlanta (or Atlanta, but if you have been here you know what I mean) and I have taken good ole MARTA enough. However, I have not seen anyone using a cellphone to surf the web. (Or maybe there is some new method of websurfing by putting it to your ear that I don't know about) I think this is because of two reasons....
1) have a fancy phone, you increase your chance of getting jacked, and MARTA ain't the safest rail system.
2) just not big in the southern US.
Anyone care to prove or disprove my thoughts? We all know cell phone advances occur at a much higher rate in EU, so is this a legitimate concern? Seems to me we got too many other things to worry about other than a stupid cell phone, but that's just my opinion.
Re:really? (Score:2)
Ok, I am gonna ask a naive question here. I live in Hotlanta (or Atlanta, but if you have been here you know what I mean) and I have taken good ole MARTA enough. However, I have not seen anyone using a cellphone to surf the web. (Or maybe there is some new method of websurfing by putting it to your ear that I don't know about)
NTT Docomo (the Japanese PTT) offers a thing called "I-mode", basically stripped HTML 4 (cHTML) with GIF pictures only that can be viewed on phones with nifty color screens. I-mode has also been launched in The Netherlands, and I think in Germany as well (by KPN Mobile and E-Plus).
I-mode, unlike WAP 1.x, uses GPRS (packet service) by default, and handsets are required to display 256 colors. The mobile versions of TCP/IP and HTTP used (yes, I know, mobile versions, why change a winning team?) in current I-mode are the same as in WAP 2.0 though. The main difference then is in the markup language (cHTML vs. WML) and the color thing, though the newer handsets do GPRS, color and WAP 2.0 (including WML).
Since neither WAP nor I-Mode use real HTML, these Japanese people aren't surfing 'the' web, but rather a subset. Of course it helps that not many Japanese actually have a desktop computer that is hooked up to the net (what with being a pretty rocky country, running cables isn't cheap).
Meanwhile.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Some nerdy slashdotter want to head out and measure it themselves while this jackhole is sitting there with a pencil? Please post your results.
This is really nonsense. (Score:5, Informative)
A microwave cooker uses a very high power magnetron (usually >500W), directed in a narrow, focused beam, into a resonant cavity (the oven itself) from a distance of around 6". Furthermore, the oven uses a specific frequency, much below which RF heating is much weaker, and you need a lot more power (somewhere around 2.45GHz).
Now, a mobile phone uses around 1 or 2 watts *peak*. In normal use, it won't go above 500mW rms, otherwise the batteries would last only a few minutes. Not only that, but the antenna is designed to spread the signal over a wide area.
Mobile phone cell towers are also pretty much safe - although they use a much higher power than phones (15W or so, IIRC) they tend to be stuck up on high poles, well away from people. Inverse Square Law, anyone?
Here in Scotland, we recently had a series of large protests about siting cell towers near schools. The protesters were mainly middle-class mothers, from supposedly posh parts of Glasgow. Damn near all of them had sunbed tans. I'd take my chances with a mobile phone cell tower before I'd risk skin cancer from a sunbed...
Re:This is really nonsense. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This is really nonsense. (Score:2, Insightful)
You can't just the compare the powers... The frequency range is really important...
Re:This is really nonsense. (Score:2)
both reflection and the cumulative effect of the radio waves were taken into consideration, the resulting electromagnetic field in a train carriage could exceed the maximum exposure level recommended by the International Committee for Non-Ionising Radiation (ICNIRP).
and the
Hondou's calculations show that it is possible to exceed ICNIRP exposure limits if 30 people, each with a mobile phone that emits radio waves at a power of 0.4 watts, all use their phones at the same time. The peak power a mobile phone is allowed to produce is two watts.
Re:This is really nonsense. (Score:2)
cancer at 1.9 GHz, and other myths (Score:4, Informative)
My cell phone (the ubiquitous Nokia 3360) is a TDMA phone that operates in the IS-54 (800 MHz) and IS-136 (1.9 GHz) bands. Now, 1.9 GHz sounds like a big, scary cancer-causing number. So let's see if it really is.
First of all, we need to know how radiation causes cancer. We'll just assume it's electromagnetic radiation, since cell phones definitely do not emit anti-protons, neutrons, muons and other shit like that. There's no way in hell a battery the size of a Triscut can generate reaction energies high enough to produce hadrons or leptons, so we can forget about them. (Well, actually, with a big capacitor you might get a few, but you're already getting showered with cosmic rays, and the pathetic little fart of hadrons you'd get out of a cell phone battery wouldn't count for didly squat.) The cancer-causing mechanism for electromagnetic radiation is fairly simple. In order to be dangerous, a photon (the electromagnetic force carrier particle) needs to carry enough energy to ionize (chemistry parlance for "fuck up") something important. It doesn't really matter how many photons you're slinging around, since it's the frequency that determines the energy of a single quanta.
So, what is our hypothetical candidate cancer-causing quanta going to have to inonize to do the deed? Well, DNA of course. It's going to have to cause a genetic mutation. Because of the way photons interact with matter, they are most likely to be absorbed by electromagnetically contiguous objects of sizes roughly equal to their wavelength. The reasons are deeper than this, but suffice it to say that a photon is "smeared" over an area about the size of its wavelength. Since you can't absorb part of a quanta (that's why they're called quanta, after all), you have to have a thing big enough to soak up a whole particle about the size of the wavelength. In this way, everything is, or is made of, antennae. To cause a mutation, you have to have a photon whose wavelength is about equal to diameter of a DNA molecule. Actually, the ideal length of an antenna is a quarter the wavelength of its intended optimal frequency, so we'll say the wavelength we're looking for is four times the diameter.
So, as I said, my cell phone operates at 1.9 GHz, or 1.9 billion cycles per second. What's the wavelength? Well, wavelength is the period times the speed of light. The period is the the inverse of frequency, so :
3*10^8 / 1.9*10^9 ~= 0.16 M
That's about the length of your hand, give or take a thumb. One quarter of that is about 4 cm - about the length of your thumb, give or take a nail. Now ask yourself this question: How big is your DNA?
If your DNA is built out of atoms the size of rasins, you might have something to worry about. The diameter of the DNA helix is 2 nm and the vertical rise per base pair is 0.34 nm. If you want a photon that will be able to reliably zap DNA, it needs to have a wavelength _smaller_ than 8 nm. The probability that a photon will be absorbed by a given object decreases with respect to the difference between the size of the object and the wavelength of the photon according to the standard deviation. So what's the probability that a given photon spewing out of my cell phone is going to fry some of my DNA? Well, we're a factor of five million away from the optimal wavelength. I'd say it's pretty fucking unlikely.
But wait a second - what's kind of radiation has a wavelength of 8 namometers? Well, we do the opposite to find the frequency :
3*10^8 / 8*10-9 = 3.7*10^16
That's in the ultraviolet range. Surprise, surprise!
So, what can we conclude from this? Well, since a cell phone has a transmission power of less than a watt and a wavelength the size of your thumb, it's not going to do jack shit to your DNA. Nada. Zilch. In other words, THERE IS NO WAY CELL PHONE RADIATION CAN GIVE YOU CANCER!!! I'd be more inclined to beleive that the plastic in the earpiece causes cancer.
You're several orders of magnitude more likely to contract cancer as a result of proximity to a 100 watt incandecant light bulb. It's got a much, much higher output, and its frequency range is thousands of times higher.
So relax, enjoy your wireless technology, and wear your SPF-30.
Re:you are rationalizing (Score:3, Insightful)
There's a much larger EM field set up by the traction motors. Why isn't anyone worried by that?
Re:you are rationalizing (Score:2, Interesting)
I have no idea what that is supposed to mean. Both kinds of radiation can kill, as can a rock that's dropped on your head. The question is whether the RF you are exposed to daily is a significant risk compared to other risks (including risk from ionizing radiation) you are exposed to daily, and whether we can control those risks through public policy.
I don't know whether it is dangerous or not, but I do know that your arguments for why people shouldn't worry don't hold. We know that individual cell phones operating in normal ways have measurable biological effects, so it stands to reason to suspect that they might be harmful if either radiation increases or exposure is long-term.
There's a much larger EM field set up by the traction motors.
Not necessarily inside the passenger cabin, which is usually shielded from those motors. They are also much lower frequency and don't result in tissue heating. And nobody has demonstrated physiological effects from that.
Why isn't anyone worried by that?
Lots of people are, in fact, quite worried about it.
Re:you are rationalizing (Score:2)
My point is that any effects from the minute amount of RF produced by mobile phones is not going to have any physiological effect worth mentioning. There probably are very tiny effects, but it's unlikely there will be any damage to your health.
Sticking your head in a microwave oven, on the other hand, will harm your health. But, only because the absorbed RF energy is many many orders of magnitude higher.
Re:you are rationalizing (Score:3)
However people also thought humans can never survive speeds at 20 miles per hour, and doomed the frist trains, and were backed by scientist. Even then most medics critizied that there are high possibilities that travelling at such "enormous" speeds is likely to leave permanent damadges on the human body, and warned everybody not to risk that. What do you think today of this?
What should we learn from this? Panoia can also be very rediculous, seen afterwards.
Re:you are rationalizing (Score:2)
What should we learn from this? That those mercury skin treatments are great! And asbestos is a great material to use everywhere! And that we'll control those pesky bugs by introducing their natural predator, the canetoad!
What we should learn from all this is not to react emotional, but objective. Watch the fact how strong rdiation is, what impacts it does have, etc. "radiation" is in the meanwhile a bad word. I would watch the earth we're walking on. You know? It radiates, and yes relatiwe strongly even. 1/2 of radiation impact upon you comes from the inside of earth.
In contrast of asbestos and xrays we do not know what impact mobilies have. For one I can't tell you for sure for any person but the caller it's indeed "mostly harmless". It's 100 times weaker than radio or television signals. For the caller himself the problem is that you hold the sender directly to the head. It is known that temperature of the brain can increase up to 1 degree, if doing long calls. Maybe you experienced yourself, I did when using a wobile langer than 1 hour, you'll feel you ear warming up. How it impacts on the human body? We don't know honestly. For me who is doing such calls ~once in a month, it's most likely no problem. For one daing this on a day by day basis, well then after ten years he might have effects from that. We'll just see, but it will really effect if at all only the most hardcore mobile users.... (whereever they take the money to use the mobile 4 hours a day or so~)
It's the same with electromagnetic fields "radiated" (uhhh... evil word) by the powersource network. We honestly dan't know what long time impacts are, they are proofen rather weak on a normal dose, as we've electricity over a century already, and haven't noticed anything remarkable. How it is with really strong fields over long times, nobody knows. However i.e. RM medics are exposed to very strongf magnetic fields on day by day, and yet alse nothing noticable seemed to have effected those, who knows exactly?
Re:toxins (Score:2)
Let me make this clear - *You* are going to *die*. So am I.
You're far more likely to get cancer from exposure to benzine from unleaded petrol than from mobile phone radiation.
Re:This is really nonsense. (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Radiation found to be harmful, largest Radiation source found to be the Sun, blow up the Sun advises Slashdot.
Scientists claim radiation can be use to kill cancer, carry more mobile phones advises Slashdot.
Living in City can lead to lung disease, move to the country advises Slashdot.
Living in country results in lower salaries, move to City advises Slashdot.
Car pollution causes Global warming, buy bigger cars advises Slashdot.
Is there a risk from this RF, yup, is there more of a risk from people driving while using a mobile than from this... oh boy yes. Is there a risk from Coal fired powerstations from radiation... oh wow yes.
Passive Mobile phone usage, Caligormia to legislate.
It seems to me (Score:2, Interesting)
Idiotic (Score:5, Informative)
Why does everybody still take this stuff seriously? Read the article- all this study does is establish that you get exposed to more RF radiation in a crowded train car than you do in other places. The scary part only comes in when it brings up these "international guidelines" which such exposure may exceed. Who established these guidelines, and how? The article does not say anything beyond the name of the organization, but I note that its name makes it sound like an independent, non-governmental organization- so this could be effectively anybody smart enough to give themselves a clever-sounding name
The idea that RF transmissions will kill you or cause cancer has a long and ugly history of bad science concealed by calculated emotional appeals. It was basically started by a guy whose wife (who used a cell phone a lot) died of brain cancer, from which he concluded that cell phones cause cancer. Most of the "science" that has been done on this issue is basically the same idiotic reasoning dressed up in white lab coats. It is highly likely that the organization setting this 'standard' is in fact one of the lobbying groups associated with the anti-cell-phone movement.
Consider- radio waves are extremely low-energy- far below the threshold necessary to break molecular bonds, which is how genuine cancer-causing radiation works. Thus, if RF waves do cause cancer, the mechanism by which they do this is A. different than for other sorts of radiation, and B. totally unknown.
Plus, as has been pointed out a million times, a 'jammer' is a device which drowns out a signal by emitting a much more powerful signal of its own, not by magically making the other signal go away. If RF waves give you cancer, the jammer will give you cancer faster.
Re:Idiotic (Score:2, Informative)
We know that cell phones (and other radio broadcasting equipment) emit radiation that is harmful to living beings at high power. The current theory is that this radiation at lower powers are not harmful.
But let's look at this. There are many dangers that radiation causes, but the one that concerns most people is cancer. What is the mechanism for radiation causing cancer? An ionizing radiation particle strikes the DNA inside the nucleus of a cell, causing a mutation that causes the cell to go into a state of uncontrolled cell reproduction. It just takes one initial cell to mutate to make a tumor.
Of course for this to happen, the radiation has to strike the DNA in exactly the right place. Your cells contain a lot of error-checking, so it is extremely unlikely for a single photon to make this happen. That is why scientists say you need a high dose of cell phone radiation to get cancer. But cancer has always been a probability game. You can get cancer from swallowing a single molecule of benzene, if it finds its way into the nucleus of a cell and attaches itself to the right place in your DNA. In the same way, a single cell phone call can give you cancer -- it's just not that likely.
Lower power radiation does not mean lower power photons coming from the antenna. It means less photons per second leaving the antenna. They are the same photons - the energy of a photon depends only on its frequency (E=hv, energy = Planck's constant times the frequency.) If a lot of photons of a certain frequency can give you cancer, so can just one.
I am an electrical engineer, but sometimes I think that a hundred years from now, people will look back on what we're doing in these times the same way we look at the coal-burning pollution at the start of the industrial revolution. We're crazy!!
We are bathing ourselves in RF! Not only do we wrap all of our houses in wiring that transmit 60Hz radiation, we broadcast in every known frequency that we can - AM, FM, television, cell phones. (AM is especially bad - so much of the power is wasted in the carrier.) Companies fight over unused parts of the spectrum - they can't wait to send cancer-causing photons into our bodies!!
Using electrons and photons to transmit information (at relatively low levels) is one thing. A century from now they will look back and be surprised that we used electricity - in all its lossy, inefficient, cancer-causing glory - to transmit energy from one place to another. That's just a bad idea. (A lot of people are looking at hydrogen, extracted from water through electrolysis, as a clean way to transport energy)
Of course, as has been mentioned, modern living exposes us to all kinds of health risks. Personally, I will keep driving my benzene-spewing car and using my radiation-emmitting cell phone until the next thing comes along.
yo.
Re:Idiotic (Score:3, Informative)
It's not just the intensity of the electromagnetic radiation. Cell phones emit non-ionizing radiation. Each photon has much less energy than the UV, X-ray, and gamma ray photons that can cause cancer.
Re:Idiotic (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Idiotic (Score:2)
Your description of the mechanism by which radiation causes cancer, and of the quantum nature of radiation are both entirely correct. The only problem is that RF radiation is non-ionizing. In other words, an individual photon in the radio frequency band does not have enough energy to induce a chemical change in any molecule. Consequently, as you note, even enormously strong RF waves cannot cause chemical changes, because they just consist of more (low-energy) photons. Thus, the traditional cancer-causing mechanism for radiation does not apply to RF. The only known physiological effect of RF radiation is thermal- if you absorb an RF photon, your body heats up by that amount. However, you will notice that you don't need to take off a sweatshirt to use a cell phone- the thermal effects of that amount of RF radiation are miniscule to nonexistant, so that's no good as a mechanism either.
Re:Yes you are (Score:2)
Non-existant? This [electric-words.com] is the best overview I've been able to find of the extensive research that has been done in this area. Note that nearly all of the results were negative, and most of the positive results were refuted by later studies. I have only been able to find a reference to one study of cell-phone radiation and it was apparently undertaken by the cell-phone industry, so I won't insult your intelligence by citing it. However, it is suggestive that studies of even much more powerful RF signals have yielded no evidence of a health hazard.
Your suggestion that it is usually better to guard against unproven risks is preposterous- we should guard against risks in proportion to the amount of evidence for the risk, and in inverse proportion to the costs of guarding against it. The problem is that the levels of RF radiation that the alarmists say are cancer-causing are so low that this would effectively mean banning broadcasting, which seems an awfully high price to pay to avoid a risk with little to no evidence that it even exists.
Re:Idiotic (Score:3, Insightful)
I stand corrected. The ICNIRP's credentials appear to be impeccable. My point is that the posted article cannot be taken at face value because it says nothing about that organization's credentials, or reasons for setting those standards.
Microwaves and RF waves are not the same thing- microwaves are higher-frequency than RF waves, and consequently are higher-energy. Cell phones broadcast at the high end of the RF spectrum, but still below the microwave range. Moreover, their signals are extremely weak. Yes, there is plenty of evidence that microwaves, and even RF waves, have physiological effects- they warm you up. When you absorb any sort of radiation, that energy enters your body, mostly as heat. However, you will notice that you cannot stay warm by making cell phone calls, no matter how many phones you use- the power level of a cell phone antenna is far too small to have a measurable effect on your body temperature. Thus, if that immeasurably small increase in temperature can give you cancer, we're already dead, because you heat up your head a lot more every time you stand in direct sunlight.
Trains do this? (Score:3, Funny)
Max watts is two? (Score:2)
So where does the author get 2 watts from?
And what about digital, which is what most phones use now. Don't they operate at even lower power?
Better design of jammer (Score:2, Funny)
Benefits -
prevents users dialling out
prevents users accepting calls
low rf power requirements
reasonable battery life
difficult for law enforcement to track down
Disadvantages -
illegal
more difficult to design
Any final year electronics students looking for an interesting project??
Keith.
Re:Better design of jammer (Score:2, Interesting)
Electromagnetic radiation - the facts . (Score:2, Informative)
The media would have us believe that radiation is an evil thing that destroys and mutates anything it touches.
So let's just be a little more scientific here shall we, and find out a bit about what EM radiation really is.
Electro-magnetic radiation is a term referring to the radiated field (ie, moving energy) of all types of electro-magnetic waves, from completely benign low-energy stuff like the radio waves your tv and radio receive, to quite nasty stuff such as gamma radiation. The difference is the amount of energy (and hence frequency) involved, and what happens to matter when exposed to those energies.
A large portion of the EM spectrum contains radiation that is of such a low frequency that the most it could do is impart some heat (okay, maybe a lot of heat) into your body. Anyone who has ever stood outside in the sun (yeah I know, I'm talking to a bunch of IT geeks who have probably never gone outside), will have noticed that it feels quite warm. You may not realise you've just experienced what it's like to be exposed to infrared radiation.
Look around, and bask in the knowledge that without the radiation we call visible light hitting the back of your eyes, you wouldn't be able to see a damn thing out there.
Now go back inside, turn on your TV and enjoy the television signals that are propogating through your house and are being converted into a very weak electrical current by the aerial on your TV, which is then hugely amplified so that you can watch a cartoon about mutant ninja turtles who live in a sewer.
When you fall and break your leg, you get carried off to the local hospital, where they radiate your leg with a high-energy radiation commonly called x-rays. When they do this, they cover the parts of your body they don't want to radiate with layers of lead, since lead is a cheap and dense atom and tends to absorb most things that hit it. This provides a shielding affect, which is good, because x-rays *are* dangerous if you are exposed to them for too long.
The reason that x-rays and gamma rays are dangerous, and radio waves and visible light are not, is that high-energy radiation contains sufficient energy to break the bonds within an atom, and can knock off electrons - creating a charged atom (known as an ion).
To say that another (simpler) way, ionising (ionizing for americans) radition is a dangerous thing to play with, since the cells in your body are not designed to operate well when charged. This is not to say that they will 'mutate' and your skin will turn green. More likely is that those cells will die and if you continue to be exposed to the radiation source, your body will be unable to produce new cells fast enough to replace the dead ones. Organs will shut down and stop functioning, and eventually your body will die from specific failures that I don't need to get into here.
Non-ionising radiation does not contain sufficient energy to break nuclear bonds, and thus is pretty safe to be around (The world would be a boring place without visible light).
Having said that, it's not entirely accurate to say that all non-ionising radition is safe - because it can destroy cells by heating them past the point that they can operate at. Anyone who has stayed out on the beach too long will be well aware of the danger of ultraviolet light, which is a non-ionising form of radiation, and thus does not destroy cells at an atomic level, but simply heats them up and burns them.
Fortunately the human body is capable of dealing with this, and the deeper layers of your skin produce a dark compound that is quite good (but not perfect) at absorbing UV radiation. Most people have seen this happening, and call it a sun tan.
This is not *quite* the same as the infra-red radiation that comes from say an oven or heater - that too can burn your skin, but since it has a different level of energy, and thus frequency, the exact manner that damage occurs.
What may surprise many people is that MICROWAVE radiation (1ghz - 100ghz) is also non-ionising. The damage it can cause is thermal, just like UV, radio, tv, infra-red, and ultra-violet radiation.
Microwave ovens work at 2.4ghz by *heating* whatever it is that you put in it. The reason they are shielded is that the makers don't want to cook the people standing outside the oven. If you were stupid enough to stick your hand in a microwave oven and turn it on, your hand would suffer a similar fate to as if you had put it in a fire or over a bunsen burner.
Incidently, 802.11b wireless networking works at around 2.422ghz - the same freqency that your microwave oven works at, but at a much lower power level, which is why you won't even feel a warm spot on your hand if you stuck it in front of the aerial.
GSM cellphones operate at 980Mhz, 1800Mhz, and 1900Mhz, depending on what type of network you are on. Those frequencies are at the end of the 'radio' part of the EM spectrum and the beginning of the 'microwave' part. Bear in mind that the term 'microwave' is simply referring to the size of the wavelength, and covers frequencies in the range 1Ghz to about 100Ghz.
Don't just take my word for it - check for youself. Google knows all, but I'll give you a few starting points:
There's a nice clear diagram showing where the different energies (types of radiation) fit in to the EM spectrum on nasa's site:
http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/know_
And there's a good explanation of ionising and non-ionising radiation here:
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9
Something to think about... (Score:4, Interesting)
Or what about wireless ethernet for that matter...
We need science, and we need to know what is dangerous and what is not. But these reports, or the reports about the dangers of potato chips, is not especially valid yet. I belive that two independant studies has to be made before you can draw any conclusion, and both of them has to live up to certain scientific standards.
All a bit narrow minded (Score:5, Interesting)
Phones may not do this to such a great extent - but open up one of the many "monkey drum" microwave dishes found all over the place in the UK, and the USA as well I should imagine. What do you find? A conventional cooking microwave magnetron. Ok, slightly different, and usually of a lower power.
Radar can produce huge bursts of power - and round radar sites, there are exclusion zones to stop you receiving a dose large enough to make you infertile or even kill you. Precision Approach Radar can be very dangerous in this respect due to the fact that the frequency and power used are dangerous, the dishes are located at ground level, and some of them can rotate 360 degress in seconds (the unit has to realign when different runways are used, and if you are in the way). Yes, this is an extreme case... but it still shows something.
I think that dismissing RF as safe because it doesn't cause ionisation or heating is stupid. In the same way as smoking was once viewed as safe, and that skin cancer has only been noticed very recently. Often our bodies do not behave in the ways which we think they should. I just think we should wait to see all the evidence before we jump to conclusions.
Surely electric currents in the brain are affected by RF? Do we know if this is bad or not? People also die when they are using their phone and can't pay full attention to the situation they are in.
Other issues are that when many radio waves are in a small space, they do not always combine to produce the same frequencies. Harmonics and other frequencies are generated, so saying that the frequency that the phone transmits is not dangerous doesn't mean the area is. Powers can also mount up.....
And jammers tend not to be high power - they disrupt the signal in a more clever manner. Although in the short term, the phones will transmit with more power, people will turn them off or the phones will stop trying so regularly.
I don't have a mobile. I don't want one mainly for the reason I don't want to be conctacted when someone doesn't know where I am. Landlines tend to be cheaper as well.
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
Other issues are that when many radio waves are in a small space, they do not always combine to produce the same frequencies. Harmonics and other frequencies are generated, so saying that the frequency that the phone transmits is not dangerous doesn't mean the area is.
Adding multiple frequencies together will NOT create any new frequencies.
If that was the case - all the radio stations would result in so many extra frequencies that'd we'd barely have any usable radio spectrum for anything else.
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
Reflections cause a change in wavelength, and hence also in frequency.
Signals such as these in FM broadcast are not affected in such a way, as they are of low amplitude.
The Raman effect causes energy to move to otherwise higher or lower frequencies (I cannot remember which).
So it is perfectly possible for many thousands of components to be produced in the space close to the mobile that have significant power to affect other devinces.
I also did not say "adding multiple frequencies". The interaction between signals is far more complex than addition in the real world.
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
Transmitters, or transformers? "Substation" usually refers to an electrical substation.
Transmitters and transformers. I honestly believe that an the EMF off large substations can make you feel ill, and others two. I think it may be enhanced by a placebo effect.
Well, no, it doesn't. Just because something can kill you under the right conditions doesn't mean it's always dangerous. If I fire a bullet at your head with a gun, you'll probably die, but if I throw it at you you're not in any danger.
Throw thousands of bullets at me every minute of every day, however, and it may start to have effect. In the same way that smoking one cigarette may make only a little difference, but it does have some, on the length of your life
And it is all calculated risk. I know I'm not going to die from RF effects, I'm far more likely to fall off a rock or get run over.
People are scared by this stuff because it's invisible
Asbestos scares the shit out of me, and that is far more dangerous when it can't be seen. It was used for years, and no one gave a shit about it. Now it is treated with such care and respect....
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
If I ever go anywhere where I think I may get into trouble and need to call police/rescue, then people know when I should be back, and someone else with me has a mobile anyway.
So, in reference to the anonymous coward above, why should I spend £15 a month plus call charges, to keep a useless piece of equipment with me that increases the risk of being mugged, you "fucking dimwit".
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
Re:All a bit narrow minded (Score:2)
At the moment, in London, over 60% of muggings are to steal mobile phones. I know someone who had two guys attempt to mug him for his mobile, and when they found out he didn't have one, walked away.
Payphones also tend to be covered by the CCTV system where I live.
heh, dont forget those metal elevators... (Score:2)
Mmmm, my lunch wasnt cooked when i brought it in with me this morning....
What about CB radio? (Score:2, Interesting)
imagine the radiation you'd be absorbing then. Surely all truckers would have cancer by now?
Sure its a much lower frequency but I can tell you
from persojnal experience (I once held an aerial that was transmitting by mistake) that even SW
radio can heat you up quite considerably!
Re:What about CB radio? (Score:2, Interesting)
1/d^2 where d is the distance. Say you measure power at one foot. The power at two feet will be 1/4 of the power at one foot. At 4 feet from the radiator, it will be 1/16th of the power. At 50 feet, it will be 1/2500th of the power at one foot, at 100 feet, 1/10,000th.
It's just a computer model (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is, there is no mention of any real-world measurements being taken. Maybe the model is fundamentally flawed. Maybe having people in the carriage causes the signals to be attenuated more quickly than the model allows for. Maybe the metal of the carriage is not a perfect reflector. Maybe there is destructive interference between phones like the fading on AM radio stations in the evening etc. After all, if too much of the radiation were bouncing around internally, not enough would get out to allow the phones to work at all.
Re:It's just a computer model (Score:2)
I'd say it's worthy of doing a real study though with real people, multiple tests with certain percentages using cell phones and even an empty "control" carriage. But if there really was a huge amount of radiation in there, we would have noticed two effects: a.) It's too tough to get a signal with all that radiation, and b.) There would be a lot more birth defects in the past few years.
Phone Jammer (Score:2)
"Might be time to buy a cell phone jammer."
This reminds me a scene from Spaceballs [imdb.com], where Lone Star (Bill Pulman [imdb.com]) fires a pot of raspberry jam at Dark Helmet's (Rick Moranis [imdb.com]) radar.
"Raspberry. There's only one man who would dare give me the raspberry: Lone Star!"
If you covered someone's mobile in jam, that'd stop them using it. Only while they stopped to smash your face to a pulp, mind, but it'd stop them none the less.
Re:Phone Jammer (Score:2)
Well, they would be weakened by all that radiation..
Why bother with a jammer... (Score:3, Interesting)
As for the train, the only area not covered is the windows, adding a fine mesh of wire (inside the glass) and connect it to the body off the train, and you have an effective mean of shutting down most of the mobile phone emmision, they only remaining is the mobile phones trying to reach a base station.
If people travel a certain amount of time, say 20 minutes or more, they are likely to turn off the mobile phone since there is no access until they get off the train. And they will save some power on the battery (not as big a problem as it used to be though).
flaws (Score:2)
They annoy me enough as is. (Score:3, Funny)
It was nicer back in the day when it cost 30 cents per minute to use your cell, and thats if you were only making a local call. A lot of people had them, but nobody used them unless they HAD to, and even then they kept the conversations short and to the point. There was no fear of idle chitchat while in a movie theatre.
And no offense to women, but they're abusive phone users. This is nothing new. But before cheap cell phones, they were isolated to their own homes and didn't seem too compelled to share their hours long conversations with the rest of the world. But now, go into any large grocery store and I can almost certainly guarantee you that there will be at least ONE woman in there gossiping up a storm with someone over the cell, almost completely oblivious to the world around her. Its worse when they drive.
So hey, I'm all in favor. LET the phones cause cancer. Hell, make them even MORE dangerous. And the louder the user speaks, make it emit more radiation. Its the perfect way to rid the world of the people that seem to dedicate their lives to annoying others.
-Restil
Re:They annoy me enough as is. (Score:2)
I just can't figure out all these idiots who can't live without their phone. I often don't even answer the phone at home. Caller ID is a beautiful thing-- my office phone now has it too.
Jammers gonna git a whoopin'. (Score:5, Insightful)
And you actually want to jam cell phone calls? I hope those people get their asses sued off the day somebody tries to phone in a life threatening injury but can't. If you have the right to jam my phone, I must have the right to slash your tires to keep from annoying me. I can't wait until they make jamming triangulators so they can find you, beat your sorry butt down and break your little toy. heh.
Ironically, I'm betting your little jammer will produce more EM radiation than a cellphone. I used to work on EA-6b Prowlers [navy.mil] in the navy and you're going to have a tough time jamming without generating an equal or greater amount of power than the source. That, and the greater the range, the more power it'll require. Have fun irradiating yourself, chumps.
No registration required (Score:2)
Yes, but the entire edition of the New York times is available for free, whereas Newscientist.com only contains teasers from the print edition (http://www.newscientist.com/inprint/ [newscientist.com]).
you laughed... (Score:2)
Why didn't the researcher... (Score:2)
Re:don't tell me you're suprised with this news ! (Score:2, Informative)
"We"?
Excessive amounts of water is not good for your health, neither is a) eating too much organic food b) eating too much genetically modified food c) eating "normal" food d)
Microwave oven's output is typically from 600 W upwards. Are you really comparing this to hundreds of milliwatts?
The "risk" of cellular phones has been and is being investigated - large scale and publicly. Check your sources. Unfortunately (or fortunately) for those with radiation phobia, none of the scientific studies have linked cell phones to cancer or other serious health problems.
Microwave radiation has been shown to increase tissue temperature slightly. According to one study it also changes protein production in human cells
Re:Kinda freaky when you think about it... (Score:2)
Still, at least, there is cause to make a physics study on the propagation of microwave radiation. Hell it would be fun, and physicists might learn something. There are definite hot spots and cold spots in any microwave oven, due to standing waves. This is why most home ovens have a rotating plate.
I think there's the remote possibility that this could have a bizarre and adverse effect. I recall reading about a modern art sculpture in a public square, made from stainless steel, that unintentionally focused the sun's rays to some tiny point a few metres above it. That point would become almost as hot as the surface of the sun. Once in a while pigeons would burst into flames as they inadvertently flew through this region.
I'd hate to see that on a train or other public place. Think of a curved ampitheatre building full of people, and shaped like a concave mirror. At the end of the show, if enough people turn on their cell phones and then dial their voicemail to check their messages, it's concievable that several people at a focus point could end up like the pigeons... Quite a thought!
BTW I am a physics undergraduate, I find this really interesting.
What FUD (Score:3)
There is an awful lot of research into the effects of mobile phones (certainly here in Europe) as it is such a big issue and people are worried. However, so far no effects have been shown apart from usage of phones actually improving your short term memory by a small amount.
Still worried? Well here is a parallel example. Find yourself a large magnifying glass and stand underneath it in bright sunlight. You will be cooked. Does this mean that sunlight is dangerous? Well yes if its bright sunlight (sunburn / cancer etc). However at low levels it is good for you. Your body needs sunlight to produce vitamin D, without it you get rickets etc.
So will mobile phones kill you? The answer to that is a definite Yes. Many people have already died directly caused by mobile phones. How? Well by walking out in front of cars whilst talking, driving in walls whilst using them etc. Compared to this, this risk of getting cancer or other ill through mobile phone usage is tiny. Not nil, this can't be proved, but tiny.
Re:don't tell me you're suprised with this news ! (Score:5, Funny)
What's even worse is there's never been a full-scale study about the dangers of Light bulbs. Just look at them (figuratively, I mean) radiating electromagnetic radiation everywhere. I mean, your house is full of the damn things, and those evil light bulb companies don't want us to know the truth.
Turn off the lights!!!
-Chris
Re:don't tell me you're suprised with this news ! (Score:3, Insightful)
The studies are all public, and the results are frequently published on the TV news and in papers over here. It couldn't be any more open, seeing as the vast majority of the population have mobiles it's in everyone's interest. The fact is there hasn't been any real conclusion one way or the other yet, but that's not because of a cover up or because of people "closing their eyes", it's because science doesn't know whether it's a risk yet or not.
So it comes down to personal choice - I for one and happy to take the (slight, IMHO) risk that there may be health problems in exchange for the convenience. If you don't think that's a risk worth taking, don't use a phone. Just make sure you live in an oxygen tent to avoid pollution, don't drive, don't take drugs, drink or smoke, and avoid eating bread or cakes. All those things have been PROVEN to cause health problems, but people still do them
Re:don't tell me you're suprised with this news ! (Score:2)
And anyway, the power from a single handset is so small, given the inverse square rule you are getting far more radiation from the TV, radio, and other broadcast signals than you are from my handset sitting 3 feet away. It _may_ affect me, with it right next to my head, but not you.
Re:Fight fire with fire. Ridiculous ! (Score:2)
This would stop me listening to 'IM ON THE TRAIN, NAH, ITS GOING TO BE LATE, FUCKING RAILTRACK, HOWS NANCY? SHIIIIIT, TELL HER I'LL BE THERE SOON' for 8 hours a day on my way to work!
Re:Fight fire with fire. Ridiculous ! (Score:2)
Re:hmm (Score:4, Informative)
Microwave is simply an indication for the wavelength of a certain type of RF.
Your normal microwave oven works by emitting an RF signal at 2.45GHz
Jeroen
Re:hmm (Score:2)
Re:So what? (Score:2)
What you are describing is a microwave oven. The water in your head is going to get heated and thus your brain tissue is going to get boiled slowly (very slowly though)
Jeroen
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Can't happen. There's just not enough energy, even in a train full of mobile phones. It's very simple - if you have lots of phones, they're all on different frequencies, so they will never be in phase. It would be like trying to make a metal-cutting laser with thousands of torch bulbs.
In any case, your brain would dissipate the heat far quicker than the phone could heat it - consider that your normal body temperature can fluctuate by several degrees naturally, with no ill effects.
Re:Microwaves (Score:2)
Thats bullshit....
The frequency has nothing to do with power... There is one thing though: higher frequencies get absorbed better, but they also penetrate less. The peak (goog penetration and absorbtion) is at 2.45Ghz which is the working frequency of your microwave oven. Above or below that frequency it is far less effective.
Jeroen
eehhhhh can't resist..... (Score:2)
AFAIK, around the microwave range, higher frequencies have less of a heating effect on human tissue.
So which is it?
Re:I can see it now... (Score:2, Interesting)
Lots of movie theaters, concert venues, etc. tell you to extinguish your portable (that's a literal translation anyway
Re:Stealth technology... (Score:2)