Re: lights

Posted by bbin37 on
URL: https://www.es-forum.com/lights-tp1542111p1542138.html

With ES symptoms occurring with even the low energy mercury bulbs this
could point to reaction from resonance. Since a portion of
fluorescent bulb EMR is from excited mercury vapor perhaps people with
deposits of mercury in their bodies could have those deposits excited
into sympathetic vibration. If those deposits are on or in the nerves
you'd have those nerves being stimulated. I haven't seen any studies
on this but I think reacting to the "mercury" quality of the
fluorescent EMR may be a large factor for some.

-B
--- In [hidden email], "Ian Kemp" <ianandsue.kemp@...> wrote:
>
> Is it really proven that the circuitry is the problem? It's a
likely cause,
> but I doubt that it has been systematically investigated in
isolation from
> other factors. For example, several studies show that ES reactions
often
> depend on the particular frequency. So the problem with fluorescent
lights
> (and low energy light bulbs) could be that they produce a wider range of
> frequencies than a normal incandescent bulb, including more in the
region

> which people react to. Powerwatch measured higher RF effects from
> fluorescent tubes than standard bulbs.
> Ian
>
> _____  
>
> From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of
> johnlankes
> Sent: 24 August 2006 18:17
> To: [hidden email]
> Subject: [eSens] Re: lights
>
>
>
> It's not the lights that are the problem, but is the EMR-producing
> electronic ballast circuitry that's inside the light fixtures.
>
> Interesting that unscrewing the lights stops this. Would that disengage
> the ballasts I wonder?
>
> John Lankes
>
> --- In eSens@yahoogroups. <mailto:eSens%40yahoogroups.com> com, "Marc
> Martin" <marc@> wrote:
>
> > I've also got florescent lights at work. Above my desk, I've actually
> > unscrewed a couple of them (which may not be possible for everyone
> > to do, but it certainly works!).
>
>
>
>  
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>