DocumentCode :
2184837
Title :
Power lines, cancer, and erroneous physics
Author :
Ashley, J. Robert ; Beatie, Richard E. ; Heneage, John F.
Author_Institution :
Vector Services Corp., Tanpa, FL, USA
fYear :
1998
fDate :
9-11 Jun 1998
Firstpage :
171
Lastpage :
179
Abstract :
A 1979 epidemiologic study in Denver found that living near overhead distribution lines significantly increased the risk of certain kinds of childhood cancers. No measurements of electrical quantities were made. The hypothesis advanced as an explanation was that the magnetic field would be the causative agent and that the magnetic fields could be estimated by counting the number of conductors on the line and measuring the distance to the home, termed “wiring configurations”. By estimating the induced current density in humans standing below the power lines, one learns that the electric field must be considered as a possible causative agent. The follow-on study in Denver failed to properly measure the fields directly under the power line. The defined wiring configuration codes failed to account for the spacing of the conductors or the location of the residence with respect to the supply substation. The idea that wiring configurations (a.k.a. wiring codes) estimate magnetic fields is erroneous. The studies in Denver, Los Angeles, Sweden, Finland, and a large area in the USA have found insufficient confidence in the magnetic field hypothesis, possibly because of many other physics errors; e.g., ignoring the role of vector direction, time and space averaging, not measuring any reasonable aspect of the power line electric fields and ignoring the engineering design differences in the transmission and distribution systems. The Scandinavian studies concentrated on 115 kV to 400 kV bulk transmission lines; yet, failed to consider the electric fields which induce at least ten times greater current density in a human than do the magnetic fields near the same lines. The cumulative effect of these serious errors in engineering physics is that the past decade of funded research has failed to explain why living adjacent to overhead distribution power lines in Denver and Los Angeles and living within 50 meters of bulk transmission lines in Sweden increases the risk of childhood leukemia
Keywords :
biological effects of fields; current density; electric fields; magnetic fields; power overhead lines; Denver; causative agent; childhood cancers; electric field; engineering design differences; epidemiologic study; induced current density; leukemia; magnetic fields; overhead distribution; power lines; space averaging; spacing; time averaging; vector direction; wiring configurations; Cancer; Conductors; Current density; Electric variables measurement; Humans; Magnetic field measurement; Physics; Power engineering and energy; Power measurement; Wiring;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Electro 98. Professional Program Proceedings
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4940-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ELECTR.1998.682111
Filename :
682111
Link To Document :
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