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- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!mips!news.cs.indiana.edu!umn.edu!doug.cae.wisc.edu!kolstad
- From: kolstad@cae.wisc.edu (Joel Kolstad)
- Subject: Re: Electric Blankets and Sterility
- Organization: U of Wisconsin-Madison College of Engineering
- Date: 19 Aug 92 20:20:11 CDT
- Message-ID: <1992Aug19.202011.17292@doug.cae.wisc.edu>
- Keywords: Electric Blankets Sterility
- References: <1992Aug19.170303.15912@uniwa.uwa.edu.au> <1992Aug19.123408.11089@doug.cae.wisc.edu> <25008@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Lines: 33
-
- In article <25008@castle.ed.ac.uk> cam@castle.ed.ac.uk (Chris Malcolm) writes:
- >In article <1992Aug19.123408.11089@doug.cae.wisc.edu> kolstad@cae.wisc.edu (Joel Kolstad) writes:
- >>In article <1992Aug19.170303.15912@uniwa.uwa.edu.au> gude@uniwa.uwa.edu.au (David J W Emrich) writes:
- >
- >>>3. Is there any field emitted when the blanket is switched off?
- >
- >>For all intents and purposes, no. There's some very negligible field
- >>left, but you'd be hard pressed to even measure it when the heating element is
- >>off.
- >
- >It's very easy to measure the field left when the blanket is switched
- >off. The still-connected earth or neutral line acts as a large aerial
- >lying alonside the mains, and picks up a great deal of main hum and
- >other interference. If the switch isolates all lines there is still
- >capacitive coupling. And if the plug is pulled out the wall the
- >blanket still acts as an aerial.
-
- Ok, perhaps I should have said, "you'd be hard pressed to even measure the
- extra field not caused by the background EM..." In others words, I meant that
- simply having the blanket plugged into the wall socket creates only a slightly
- larger "antenna" that slightly perturbs the local EM field. The overall
- effect, though, will be to create an EM field that I'd hope you'd agree is
- negligibly different from the one that existed before I plugged the electric
- blanket in, no? (Assuming a short cord... i.e., that the still connected
- neutral line adds a small length to the overall "antenna" of the entire
- household wiring) (And when I say "negligibly different" above, I mean in
- terms of average magnitude that's hitting people, and therefore health effects)
-
- You're quite right that just what the effect of "background" EM in an
- average house is debateable.
-
- ---Joel Kolstad
-
-