Although many studies on the biological effects of electromagnetic waves have been reported, there are few reports on protection of the human body against EM waves. In this paper, we consider a situation where a person is exposed to a plane wave (TM wave) with a frequency of 300 MHz (resonant frequ
β¦ LIBER β¦
Specific absorption rate (SAR) revisited for the ellipsoidal model of a human body
β Scribed by Lattarulo, Francesco
- Book ID
- 122322276
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 376 KB
- Volume
- 49
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0955-7997
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Reduction of specific absorption rate (S
β
Takashi Nakamura; Shinobu Tokumaru; Shiro Itoh
π
Article
π
1998
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 331 KB
Reduction of specific absorption rate (S
β
Takasi Nakamura; Shinobu Tokumaru
π
Article
π
1995
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 540 KB
Resonance behaviour of whole-body averag
β
Dimbylow, Peter
π
Article
π
2005
π
Institute of Physics
π
English
β 141 KB
Specific absorption rate and path loss i
β
Kurup, Divya; Joseph, Wout; Vermeeren, GΓΌnter; Martens, Luc
π
Article
π
2013
π
The Institution of Engineering and Technology
π
English
β 505 KB
Specific absorption rate (SAR) in models
β
Robert F. Cleveland Jr.; T. Whit Athey
π
Article
π
1989
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 762 KB
Specific absorption rate (SAR) was measured in models of the human head exposed to hand-held portable radios ("transceivers") transmitting at frequencies in the 800-MHz band. An isotropic implantable electric-field probe was used to measure internal fields induced in the head models, and SARs were d
MRI-based anatomical model of the human
β
Nikos Makris; Leonardo Angelone; Seann Tulloch; Scott Sorg; Jonathan Kaiser; Dav
π
Article
π
2008
π
Springer
π
English
β 691 KB