The current safety standards for radiofrequency and microwave exposure do not limit the peak power of microwave pulses for general or occupational exposures. While some biological effects, primarily the auditory effect, depend on pulsed microwaves, hazards associated with very high peak-power microw
โฆ LIBER โฆ
Rhesus monkey behavior during exposure to high-peak-power 5.62-GHz microwave pulses
โ Scribed by Dr. John A. D'andrea; Alfred Thomas; Donald J. Hatcher
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 844 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Lack of behavioral effects in the rhesus
โ
Dr. John A. D'Andrea; Brenda L. Cobb; John O. de Lorge
๐
Article
๐
1989
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 616 KB
Immediate post-exposure effects of high-
โ
Dr. Yahya Akyel; Edward L. Hunt; Charles Gambrill; Carlos Vargas Jr.
๐
Article
๐
1991
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 823 KB
Behavioral effects of high-peak-power microwave pulses on Wistar rats were studied by operant schedules. Each of twelve rats that had been trained to press a lever to receive food pellets was assigned randomly in groups of four to three different schedules of reinforcement: fixed-ratio (FR), variabl