Since it comes up periodicall, particularly with respect to things like
vertical antennas and low dipoles.
Here's a blurb I got today from the IEEE. C95.1 is probably the one of
most interest, although 95.2 is also interesting. These are what OET
Bulletin 65 is based on.
Because of interest raised by the public and others, the following IEEE
C95™standards are now publicly available at no cost through the IEEE Get
Program*:
* IEEE C95.1™-2005 - Safety Levels with Respect to Human Exposure
to Radio Frequency Electromagnetic Fields, 3 kHz to 300 GHz
* IEEE C95.3™-2002 - Measurements and Computations of Radio
Frequency Electromagnetic Fields with Respect to Human Exposure to Such
Fields, 100 kHz-300 GHz
* IEEE C95.3.1™-2010 - Measurements and Computations of Electric,
Magnetic, and Electromagnetic Fields with Respect to Human Exposure to
Such Fields, 0 Hz to 100 kHz
* IEEE C95.6™-2002 - Safety Levels with Respect to Human Exposure
to Electromagnetic Fields, 0-3 kHz
* IEEE C95.7™-2005 - Radio Frequency Safety Programs - 3 kHz to 300 GHz
To access these standards, visit::
http://standards.ieee.org/about/get/index.html#getC95
*Access to the above IEEE C95 standards has been sponsored by the United
States Navy, United States Air Force, and United States Army.
Sponsorship of the "Get IEEE C95" no-cost-to-public web access of the
IEEE C95 standards does not imply that the Department of Defense nor its
Component Services endorse or are obligated in any manner to adopt the
covered standards current or future versions.
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