Message from @LimaGolf

Discord ID: 698479153602625558


2020-04-11 10:11:27 UTC  

Don't power lines have even lower radiation emission than phones?

2020-04-11 10:11:59 UTC  

Was it like paranoid people who sued the people who made the power lines because I remember something like that

2020-04-11 10:12:09 UTC  

They're at 60Hz I believe.

2020-04-11 10:12:12 UTC  

And it's easily explained with the nocebo effect

2020-04-11 10:14:19 UTC  

I'd have to check

2020-04-11 10:15:18 UTC  

As for radio waves and 5G. The reason there is more towers is because those frequencies (EHF and UHF) suffer more attenuation. They bleed off energy faster. So unless you put more power behind the signal, you have to have more antennas in closer proximity.

2020-04-11 10:15:30 UTC  

I should mention I have relative living near multiple nuclear power plants and am not particularly concerned

2020-04-11 10:15:51 UTC  

Nuclear power and RF are completely different.

2020-04-11 10:16:03 UTC  

I know

2020-04-11 10:16:16 UTC  

I suppose alot of other people don't know.

2020-04-11 10:16:41 UTC  

It's just that it's even in the background radiation and our bodies are able to cope with it

2020-04-11 10:16:56 UTC  

They're a bit old so maybe it's not a good idea in the long run though

2020-04-11 10:17:03 UTC  

That's mostly due to our skin.

2020-04-11 10:18:36 UTC  

Higher frequencies are more likely to penetrate than reflect but once again they bleed energy.

2020-04-11 10:19:17 UTC  

At low power they'll simply disperse.

2020-04-11 10:19:46 UTC  

Not only the penetration but also because they're actually able to break up chemical bonds

2020-04-11 10:20:09 UTC  

Which is bad if it happens to DNA

2020-04-11 10:20:27 UTC  

Yes the ionizing levels, they're up there though. Once you get up high enough that penetrating quality starts to overcome the attenuation.

2020-04-11 10:21:53 UTC  
2020-04-11 10:25:19 UTC  

That looks like short circuiting more like

2020-04-11 10:26:47 UTC  

So it's an analog tower, normally the waves would travel harmlessly through the airwaves until they came upon a conductive antenna. From there they would reach a crystal or magnet and cause vibrations which would generate sound.

But here in this video when the stick touches it, there is enough power to excite the molecules in the stick which causes molecular vibration. That vibration causes the generation of friction (heat) and the movement of the surrounding air molecules which is the sound we are hearing.

2020-04-11 10:27:24 UTC  

Hence why we can hear the radio station through the stick

2020-04-11 10:27:29 UTC  

I think it looks pretty fake

2020-04-11 10:27:56 UTC  

I'm pretty sure they just had a radio or whatever somewhere else and turned it on when touching

2020-04-11 10:28:17 UTC  

It actually makes compete sense.

2020-04-11 10:29:30 UTC  

We mostly use digital signals now, frequency modulation is an example. Digital signals requires a computer to translate the data into something understandable.

2020-04-11 10:30:36 UTC  

But old analogue signals for music were the same modulations as actual sound waves. It just needed a median to convert it from EM waves to a physical wave.

2020-04-11 10:32:13 UTC  

With enough power it could be accomplished without the electric contact from the stick to the tower.

2020-04-11 10:36:52 UTC  

That DR Devra Davis video kinda puts a good explanation of the danger of non ionizing rf radiation.

2020-04-11 10:38:17 UTC  

It does cause DNA damage, it does lower sperm counts etc.

2020-04-11 10:44:08 UTC  

5G towers will operate at a higher frequency than what we usually use for radars and satellite communications. That being said, I don't know if it will cause any new issues. These towers will operate at lower power than a radar and satellite antenna. We're exposed to so much EMI now, heck your wifi router is either 2.4 GHz or 5GHz. I think the real danger is just the proximity to cellphones. Probably more so than the tower.

2020-04-11 10:59:10 UTC  

I wonder how much power is behind this and what frequency it operates at.

2020-04-11 11:03:32 UTC  

It seems like a horrible idea.

2020-04-11 14:17:32 UTC  

@LimaGolf Frequency Modulation can be either analogue or digital.

2020-04-11 14:20:27 UTC  

Even for analogue, you still need circuit boards to extract the information wave before you can amplify it.

2020-04-11 14:24:41 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/668911399635910666/698539022003339314/250px-Amfm3-en-de.gif

2020-04-11 15:40:22 UTC  

@MicMac I don't think we are talking about the same thing.

TBF I've yet to meet anyone who can explain this in an understandable way to me.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/668911399635910666/698558071743709214/Screenshot_20200411-183849_Chrome.jpg

2020-04-11 15:42:14 UTC  

Wave theory is pretty heavy

2020-04-11 15:42:21 UTC  

Yes. It is.

2020-04-11 15:42:32 UTC  

But AM can be digital