DocumentCode
928965
Title
The Thermal Response of a Human in the Near-Zone of a Resonant Thin-Wire Antenna
Author
Spiegel, Ronald J.
Volume
30
Issue
2
fYear
1982
Firstpage
177
Lastpage
185
Abstract
The thermal response of a human in the near-zone of an antenna was determined by numerical procedures. The approach taken was to modify the heat transfer equations for man in air to account for thermal loading due to the energy absorbed from the radiating antenna. The absorbed power density distribution in the human body was determined by considering the body and antenna to be a coupled system in which the resulting system of equations were solved by moment method procedures. This information was then analyzed by a thermal response model consisting of a series of transient conduction equations with internal heat generation due to metabolism, internal convective heat transfer due to blood flow, external interaction by convection and radiation, and cooling of the skin by sweating and evaporation. Internal heating patterns were calculated for two cases: a human in the near-zone of a quarter-wave monopole and a half-wave dipole operating at 45 and 200 MHz, respectively. It was found that negligible heating occurred for antennas with input power levels of less than 50 W.
Keywords
Equations; Heat transfer; Heating; Humans; Information analysis; Loaded antennas; Moment methods; Resonance; Thermal conductivity; Thermal loading;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9480
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMTT.1982.1131044
Filename
1131044
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