Preliminary Studies of Radiofrequency Radiation Emitted from Mobile Phone and its Health Implications
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62054/ijdm/0102.09Parole chiave:
Frequency, Absorption coefficient Radiation, Radiofrequency, IntensityAbstract
The research work aimed to study the Radiofrequency radiation emitted from mobile phone and its health implications. The experiment was carried out in the dark room (research room) of Physics Department Modibbo Adama University (MAU), Yola where the light meter sensor was used to obtain the intensities of the radiation coming from the surface of the mobile phone at normal and while ringing, at morning, afternoon and at night. The results obtained shows that 2G SIM card of MTN gave the highest intensity for both normal condition and while ringing at 0 cm, 0.7031 Wm-2 and for 3G is 0.6715 Wm-2 at 0 cm and 4G is 0.6004 Wm-2 at 0 cm, when mobile phone was ringing, the intensities for 2G, 3G and 4G at 0 cm are 0.81765 Wm-2, 0.7505 Wm-2 and 0.7268 Wm-2 respectively, for morning reading. The highest value for the half distance is 79.67 cm and the lowest value obtained showed 0.0168 cm. The lowest absorption coefficient is 0.0163 Wm-2 cm-1 and the highest value is 0.0283 Wm-2 cm-1. The highest value of peak intensity is 0.5469 Wm-2 and the lowest is 0.5180 Wm-2. Whereas the results of afternoon and night followed the same pattern. The result obtained in this work is higher than the result obtained in Ojuh and Isobana (2015). The result is also higher than that of the recommended value by the International Commission on Non-ionizing radiation protection (ICNIRP). The effects that this may cause includes blood brain barrier, eye pain and weakness, and brain tumor
Riferimenti bibliografici
Alanko T, hietenan m, occupational exposure to radiofrequency fields in antenna towers radiatprot dosimetry.2007: 123 (4).
Ashraf aly and frank bernes, “effects of 900-MHz radiofrequencies on the chemo taxis of human neutrophil is in vitro, : IEEE transactions on biomedical engineering, vol.55, no_2, 2008.
Breckenkamp j, berg G, blettner m, biological effects on human health due to radiofrequency exposure: a synopsis of cohort studies, radiat environ bio phys. 2003 oct: 42 (3): 141-54.
Center for disease control and prevention (CDC) about cancer clusters, available at the internet: http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/clusters/about.htm.
Khurana, vini, mobile phone – brain tumour public health advisory 3-4. Self – pub, retrieved on 2008.
Muscat J. E. (2000). “handheld cellular telephone use and risk of brain cancer,” JAMA (2000)
Vijayalaxmi, genetic damage in mammalian somatic cells exposed to radiofrequency radiation: a meta-analysis of data from 63 publications, 1990-2005,” radiation research, 169 (5), 561-574, 2008.
Ojuh, O. D. and Isabona, J. (2015). Radiofrequency EMF exposure due to GSM mobile phones base stations: measurements and analysis in Nigerian environment, Nigerian journal of technology (NIJOTECH), vol.34 no.4, October 2015, 809-814.
Asiegbu, A.D, and O, O Ogun laja, “preliminary investigation of RF exposure levels from mobile telephone base stations in Abia, south east Nigeria, “international journal of current research, vol.11, 47-53, 2010.
Ibitoye, Z.A and ibitoyeaweda, “A,Mibitoye Z.A and awedaA.M. 2011. Assessment of radiofrequency power density distribution around GSM and broadcast antenna masts at lagos city Nigeria nig,” med, vol21, 35-40, 2011.
Akintowa, A, busari, A.A Awodele, O and olayemi, s.o,”the hazards of non-ionizing radiation of telecommunication mass in an urban area of lagos, Nigeria, African journal of biomedical research. Vol12, No-1, 31-35, 2009.
Dowloads
Pubblicato
Fascicolo
Sezione
Licenza
Copyright (c) 2024 International Journal of Development Mathematics (IJDM)

Questo volume è pubblicato con la licenza Creative Commons Attribuzione 4.0 Internazionale.
Authors are solely responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce any copyrighted material contained in the manuscript as submitted. Any instance of possible prior publication in any form must be disclosed at the time the manuscript is submitted and a
copy or link to the publication must be provided.
The Journal articles are open access and are distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 IGO License, which permits use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
No modifications or commercial use of the articles are permitted.








