Human thresholds for skin sensations of warmth were measured at frequencies from 2.45 to 94 GHz. By solving the one-dimensional bioheat equation, we calculated the temperature increase at the skin surface or at a depth of 175 mm at incident power levels corresponding to the observed thresholds. The
Thresholds of microwave-evoked warmth sensations in human skin
โ Scribed by Dennis W. Blick; Eleanor R. Adair; William D. Hurt; Clifford J. Sherry; Thomas J. Walters; James H. Merritt
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 68 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
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โฆ Synopsis
We measured thresholds for microwave-evoked skin sensations of warmth at frequencies of 2.45, 7.5, 10, 35, and 94 GHz. In the same subjects, thresholds of warmth evoked by infrared radiation (IR) were also measured for comparison. Detection thresholds were measured on the skin in the middle of the back in 15 adult male human subjects at all microwave (MW) frequencies and with IR. Long duration (10-s), large area (327-cm2) stimuli were used to minimize any differential effects of temporal or spatial summation. Sensitivity increased monotonically with frequency throughout the range of microwave frequencies tested. The threshold at 94 GHz (4.5 +/- 0.6 mW/cm2) was more than an order of magnitude less than at 2.45 GHz (63.1 +/- 6.7 mW/cm2), and it was comparable to the threshold for IR (5.34 +/- 1.07 mW/cm2).
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