[LINK] 5G not safe?

Marghanita da Cruz marghanita at ramin.com.au
Fri Apr 5 16:41:13 AEDT 2019


Here is ACMA on the subject

> Also, the closer a small cell is to your mobile, the less power it 
> needs to communicate. The new 5G base stations will go into ‘sleep 
> mode’ when there are no active users, making their power output levels 
> even lower than current 4G base stations.

https://www.acma.gov.au/Home/theACMA/a-guide-to-small-cells?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Engage+Issue+85+February+2019&utm_content=Engage+Issue+85+February+2019+CID_0998af901bd146f29999a70232559280&utm_source=SendEmailCampaigns&utm_term=small+cells+fact+sheet

On 3/4/19 8:09 pm, David wrote:
> On Wednesday, 3 April 2019 17:59:16 AEDT Stephen Rapley wrote:
>
>> While the health impacts of RF exposure are real a quick survey of the source of this story and the host site’s other offerings - David Icke and anti-vaxer sentiments - leaves you with the sense this site is trying to squeeze the health concerns about 5G and RF in general into a tinfoil hat that doesn’t do the issue justice.
> Yes indeed.  Linkers may remember a discussion some years ago regarding a desk study by the epidemiologist  Dr. Bruce Hocking for Telstra which found a doubling of childhood leukemia in the suburbs around Gore Hill in Sydney.  This was to be phase-1 of a more detailed study, but I understand Telstra cancelled phase-2.
>
> The opening paragraph of the website item - https://takebackyourpower.net/brussels-first-major-city-to-halt-5g-due-to-health-effects/ - states "Ms. Fremault accurately identified that a *5G pilot project is not compatible with Belgian radiation safety standards* (9 V/m, or 95 mW/m2 according to this online converter[1])".
>
> But I believe the power density of an EM field of 'e' volts/metre in free space is given by (e^2)/(120*Pi) watts/sq.metre.  A field of 9 volts/metre is then 0.215 watts/sq.metre or 215 mW/sq.metre, not 95.  An ABC source once told me that the field on the roof of their administration building at Gore Hill was around 5 volts/metre, and I think that also used to be the Russian standard for maximum weekday exposure.
>
> So I think the story is wrong somewhere (maybe me?)....
>
> David L.
>
>
> --------
> [1] https://www.powerwatch.org.uk/science/unitconversion.asp
> _______________________________________________
> Link mailing list
> Link at mailman.anu.edu.au
> http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

-- 
Marghanita da Cruz
Telephone: 0414-869202
Email:  marghanita at ramin.com.au
Website: http://ramin.com.au




More information about the Link mailing list