New Technique To Study The Impact Of Cell Phone Radiation
Electro-Magnetic Model Electro-magnetic waves from the phone's antenna penetrate the brain several centimeters deep. Paul WoottonThis metal-free antenna may help scientists find out, once and for all, whether cell phones cause cancer Concerns about the health risks associated with cell phones date back almost to the dawn of the industry. Over the last four decades, while cell phones shrunk and multiplied and worked their way into the very fabric of human existence, the vague threat of danger has slunk along behind like a faint but troubling and unshakeable odor: do what they could, scientists couldn't quite eliminate it, and they couldn't quite define it, either. The best they've been able to do is say that the radiation coming from cell phones may or may not cause cancer. What's been holding researchers back up to this point is that, unlike x-rays and other forms of high-energy, ionizing radiation, low levels of radio-wave exposure...