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View Full Version : How Terahertz Waves (used in TSA body scanners) Tear Apart DNA



Ares
16th November 2010, 05:36 PM
A new model of the way the THz waves interact with DNA explains how the damage is done and why evidence has been so hard to gather

<img src="http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/files/34383/THz%20damage.png"/>

Great things are expected of terahertz waves, the radiation that fills the slot in the electromagnetic spectrum between microwaves and the infrared. Terahertz waves pass through non-conducting materials such as clothes , paper, wood and brick and so cameras sensitive to them can peer inside envelopes, into living rooms and "frisk" people at distance.

The way terahertz waves are absorbed and emitted can also be used to determine the chemical composition of a material. And even though they don't travel far inside the body, there is great hope that the waves can be used to spot tumours near the surface of the skin.

With all that potential, it's no wonder that research on terahertz waves has exploded in the last ten years or so.

But what of the health effects of terahertz waves? At first glance, it's easy to dismiss any notion that they can be damaging. Terahertz photons are not energetic enough to break chemical bonds or ionise atoms or molecules, the chief reasons why higher energy photons such as x-rays and UV rays are so bad for us. But could there be another mechanism at work?

The evidence that terahertz radiation damages biological systems is mixed. "Some studies reported significant genetic damage while others, although similar, showed none," say Boian Alexandrov at the Center for Nonlinear Studies at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and a few buddies. Now these guys think they know why.

Alexandrov and co have created a model to investigate how THz fields interact with double-stranded DNA and what they've found is remarkable. They say that although the forces generated are tiny, resonant effects allow THz waves to unzip double-stranded DNA, creating bubbles in the double strand that could significantly interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication. That's a jaw dropping conclusion.

And it also explains why the evidence has been so hard to garner. Ordinary resonant effects are not powerful enough to do do this kind of damage but nonlinear resonances can. These nonlinear instabilities are much less likely to form which explains why the character of THz genotoxic
effects are probabilistic rather than deterministic, say the team.

This should set the cat among the pigeons. Of course, terahertz waves are a natural part of environment, just like visible and infrared light. But a new generation of cameras are set to appear that not only record terahertz waves but also bombard us with them. And if our exposure is set to increase, the question that urgently needs answering is what level of terahertz exposure is safe.

http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/24331/

mick silver
16th November 2010, 05:43 PM
i never fly ... i love to drive . i can see the stuff you never see when you fly . but what there doing is wrong . if people would just stop flying for a week this crap would end when the owners of the airline stop making money

Ares
16th November 2010, 05:45 PM
i never fly ... i love to drive . i can see the stuff you never see when you fly . but what there doing is wrong . if people would just stop flying for a week this crap would end when the owners of the airline stop making money


Wish I didn't have too fly. After 9/11 flying just became a hassle. But my job requires that I fly to some of our remote offices and do work. The wife and I are also wanting to go to Hawaii before the little one is born as we're not sure when we'll have another chance.

Believe me, I'd rather not fly.

hoarder
16th November 2010, 05:56 PM
i never fly ... i love to drive . i can see the stuff you never see when you fly . but what there doing is wrong . if people would just stop flying for a week this crap would end when the owners of the airline stop making money
The airline companies are publicly traded corporations, which of course means "Wall Street" and you know who owns and controls them.
On Wall St. it doesn't matter if a company makes money or loses money, the only thing that matters financially is foreknowledge.
The owners of the airlines don't give a ratsass if they make money or not, they care about control and illusions and war against the goyim.
I usually drive, too.

madfranks
16th November 2010, 06:16 PM
I'm printing this article and taking it with me to show TSA next time I go to the airport.

chad
16th November 2010, 06:21 PM
I'm printing this article and taking it with me to show TSA next time I go to the airport.


most tsa agents can barely read dick + jane, so i'm not sure that's going to help you.

TheNocturnalEgyptian
16th November 2010, 06:30 PM
So let me get this straight.

I am faced with a choice of what to believe.

1) They did no research before rolling out these machines. They deployed them assuming no harm could come.

2) They knew the machines were dangerous and deployed them anyway. They are dead men walking and will go bankrupt after the first cases of people's DNA melting starts to emerge.

Both of those are incredibly retarded options. The intelligent mind is agahst when presented with those two choices.

There has to be a 3)

3) Their intentions are evil.


Wow, 3) sums everything up quite nicely.

MAGNES
16th November 2010, 07:35 PM
I'm printing this article and taking it with me to show TSA next time I go to the airport.


They are making targets out of people just for questioning the slightest, this is deliberate.

The TSA thugs are all going to get cancer hanging around those machines.

Cops got cancer doing radar, brain cancer, police radar cars.

hoarder
16th November 2010, 07:41 PM
They are making targets out of people just for questioning the slightest, this is deliberate.

The TSA thugs are all going to get cancer hanging around those machines.

Cops got cancer doing radar, brain cancer, police radar cars.




Then the way to present it is out of concern for TSA employees.