Title: RF Exposure Audits
1RF Exposure Audits
EDDIE BULL Baldock Operations Manager Fixed and
Mobile Monitoring and Measurements
Section Radiocommunications Agency
2- The Stewart Report
- We recommend that an independent, random, ongoing
audit of all base stations be carried out to
ensure that exposure guidelines are not exceeded
outside the marked exclusion zone and that base
stations comply with their agreed specifications.
If base station emissions are found to exceed
the guideline levels, or there is significant
departure from the stated characteristics, then
the base station should be decommissioned until
compliance is demonstrated. We recommend that
particular attention should be paid initially to
the auditing of base stations near schools and
other sensitive sites.
3- The following Table gives a summary of the
- RF Audit progress in 2002 on Cellular Radio base
station activity on or near Schools and
Hospitals.
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5- RF exposure comes from many sources, not just
from cellular systems. In fairness to the
cellular operators the Agency decided to carry
out a number of RF Audits across the radio
spectrum covering the band 30MHz to 2GHz and post
the results on the RF Audit Web site. - Residential locations close to major TV and Radio
broadcast sites were chosen to compare RF levels
from broadcast, paging, PBR and hobby radio
sources etc with emission levels from cellular
systems. - The following slides show how the Exposure
Quotient for a single emission and multiple
emissions is calculated.
6Calculations
- Exposure Quotient. (Single Signal)
- The measurement of a single signal can be given a
dimensionless quantity known as the exposure
quotient. This quantity is derived by dividing
the measured power density (Smeas) by the
guideline level (Sguid) for the measured
frequency. -
- An exposure less than unity indicates compliance
with the guidelines.
7Calculations
- Exposure Quotient. (Many Signals)
- RF exposure surveys are concerned with
simultaneous exposure to many different radio
signals spread throughout the radio spectrum.
All signals impinging on the measurement site
will contribute to the total exposure at the
point of measurement. The total exposure
quotient will be equal to the sum of the
quotients for all signals in the measured bands.
8- The following spectrum plot examples show RF
activity in the two sub-bands 30 - 860MHz and
860MHz - 2GHz.
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10SANDY HEATH Comparison of Cellular V Other
Broadcasts. Extracted from Report ML2-016-02
11Summary of example plots The total Exposure
Quotient for the whole band RF emissions (30MHz
2GHz) is 3.51e-3.The Exposure Quotient for the
sub-band 30 - 860MHz is 3.46e - 3. (1/289th of
the ICNIP guidance level) The Exposure Quotient
for the sub-band 860MHz - 2GHz is 4.95e - 5.
(1/20202th of the ICNIP guidance level)
12Although these measurements are site specific
and represent only a snapshot of the RF activity
at the time of the survey, the ratio of cellular
activity to other types of emissions appear to be
typical at most of the locations surveyed.At
the example location the dominant emissions were
Analogue TV and T-DAB signals At most of the
other survey locations Band 2 broadcast, T-DAB
and TV emissions yielded the highest levels.