Function of wireless radiation?

Sh
9

For months I'm now many hours a day, with the laptop or mobile phone on the Internet.

The Internet is broadcast by the Wlan Router.

Now my question; How does this work?

How do the waves actually spread? Are the beams stronger directly at the receiving laptop, or are they spreading evenly in all directions from the router and it does not matter where I'm?

na

The rays basically spread like light.

The antenna on the router lights up, so to speak, and the radiation is then on walls, etc. Reflects or sometimes passes through.

The antennas are usually omnidirectional, so radiate the signal in all directions.

Because WLan is bidirectional, both your laptop and router will radiate. The router radiates the data you receive from the Internet and your laptop radiates the request to open a website.

In addition, the router also regularly radiates a so-called beacon from which it allows other devices to find the network.

Ta

And how many hours a day, evening or night do you run, for example, with the smartphone in the open?

Thanks to 5G will soon be drastically more ver (radio) network…

Aw

Wi-Fi is radiated from the router like a bullet, like the mentioned light bulb so the router belongs in the middle of the house. Läppi, mobile phone and desktop communicate with the router via the signal.

Now only one construction lamp has no lampshade. So it can shine freely up to the walls of the room. As soon as one is on it, that changes.

Wi-Fi has not only the one disturbance, but many different ones. Very difficult are water, wood that just swallow the signal, and other wireless networks.

Depending on where you are, the signal is therefore different. The exact breakdown is only with you. Does it go down, look what is between you and the router. Straight houses with two floors have wooden stairs.

Ma

Somehow you do not know the modern technologies yet.

Compare it with the internal combustion engine, in the past the gasoline engine was without catalyst and the car exhaust gases had a heavy impact on the air (smok alarm in larger cities). Almost every car today has a catalytic converter or runs partially purely electrically (Tesla, et al.).
2G (= GSM) was earlier, today comes 5G (= NR).

Read my answer to this question, then the "fear" of 5G less

Ta

Who says that I'm scared? 🤣🤣🤣 … The FS was worried about his ONE router, so my answer…

Always these over-interpretations here… 😂

Sh

Okay, now that I have Lying on the bed with the laptop lying on top of me, or holding the phone in your hand and Surve or Youtube, then they are pretty good.

Is that unhealthy? I mean, if light has to penetrate several walls, how does that work without properly Wums inside?

At what wavelength are rays actually dangerous to organisms and biological life?

Ma

That was a misunderstanding, you wrote "… Dramatic…", so I wanted to reassure the readers here something.

Unfortunately, it is often the case that some keep writing "… 5G radiation…", and already a fake news is set in the world. All get panic and sit even while writing the fake news while on the wireless or use mobile data (3G, 4G, …) and get the full charge of the "evil radiation" from.

na

There are, according to my knowledge, no real studies that would prove a harmful effect of Wi-Fi, but also refute it. The only thing you should not do it as a man to bring the device close to his testicles, but it's more about the waste heat, so a normal use of the phone with Wi-Fi or with the laptop in bed should not cause any problems.

I mean, if light has to penetrate several walls, how does that work without properly Wums inside?

No, there's not so much power behind it. IdR send the things with 100mW are thus about 500-1000 times weaker than normal light bulbs. The receivers are just extremely sensitive and that's the way it works.

At what wavelength are rays actually dangerous to organisms and biological life?

Can't say flat rate, it's more a combination of tissue absorption and performance. The decisive factor here is called the specific absorption rate also called SAR and there are EU limits that must be complied with by each device with test mark in the EU. So all cell phones, laptops, etc. Must comply with these limits.

https://de.wikipedia.org/...ptionsrate

https://en.wikipedia.org/...ption_rate

https://en.wikipedia.org/...and_health

Btw the SAR value assumes that all the radiation in the body is converted to heat, which is not always the case. However, the effects of the Frey effect are still not very clear, so it may well be that it can lead to adverse effects in energy peaks, but I believe that WLAN is again too weak to induce such effects.

Ta

The world is so bad… Pöse… Pöse…