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Compact shielded exposure system for the simultaneous long-term UHF irradiation of forty small mammals II. Dosimetry

โœ Scribed by Eduardo G. Moros; William L. Straube; William F. Pickard


Book ID
101302898
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
384 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0197-8462

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โœฆ Synopsis


A four-antenna collinear array in an electromagnetically shielded chamber was designed and constructed to preferentially irradiate the brains of a large number of small mammals using cellular telephony microwave signals. Ten animals in special restrainers were positioned symmetrically around a centrally located antenna. These restrainers are resting on a circular structure made of acrylic plastic called a ''carousel.'' Four carousels are stacked vertically, forming the array, inside a microwave anechoic chamber called a ''chamberette.'' (Details of the design of this irradiator and of a 12chamberette irradiation facility are given in a previous article.) In this article, the dosimetry on rats is reported. Both thermometric and thermographic measurements were performed. The average specific absorption rate (SAR) in brain tissue measured thermometrically was 0.85 { 0.34 W/kg per watt of net input power into the radiating antenna. This range agrees with the SAR levels reported in the literature for cellular telephones. Thermographic evaluation using splittable phantoms showed that most of the energy absorbed by the rats is concentrated in and around the brain. Moreover, it was found that the SAR in brain tissue can vary considerably for rats of similar weights, depending on position of the rats' heads inside the restrainers, and that there exists a significant dependence of SAR on animal weight. These variations may be of importance in the interpretation of results of lifelong studies. The data presented clearly show that the chamberette is, dosimetrically, a suitable irradiation system for electromagnetic bioeffects studies in the cellular communication frequency range, especially when a large number of laboratory animals is required.


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A compact shielded exposure system for t
โœ Eduardo G. Moros; William L. Straube; William F. Pickard ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1998 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 333 KB

To carry out in vivo studies of the possible health effects of radiation from cellular telephone handsets, it is necessary to expose large numbers of small mammals at realistic power densities, modulations, and frequencies. Because even microwatt leakage could compromise the local cellular system, e