With recent news of a possible link between cell phone radiation and risk of brain cancer,  you may have a new-found interest in knowing how much radiation your  mobile handset is giving off -- or, more importantly, how much your body  might be absorbing.
The FCC's legal limit for mobile phones is 1.6 Watts of radiofrequency energy per kilogram, using a measure called Specific Absorption Rate (SAR). 
The Environmental Working Group,  which tracks SAR data for more than 1,300 cell phone and smartphone  models, notes that several factors besides your handset affect your  actual level of exposure. For example, distance from the cell tower  plays a part: If the connection is weak, the handset needs to generate  more radiation to make a connection to the tower. Network frequency and  technology may play a part, and even the age of the user is an issue. 
"Children and teenagers would likely get higher radiation dose than  adults from the same phone," EWG spokesperson Leeann Brown said in an  email.
Distance from the phone also matters. Using a headset or the speaker  -- or texting instead of talking -- are inexpensive ways to cut down  your exposure, EWG advises. The organization has posted 8 cell phone safety recommendations on its Web site.
The FCC also cautions that SAR alone doesn't tell the full cell phone safety story, since it measures maximum possible and not typical radiation levels.
There's a fairly wide range of SAR levels for cell phones tracked by  EWG using data from vendor Web sites, last updated in December 2010,  ranging from the LG Quantum's 0.35 W/kg to several Motorola models that  come in just at 1.60 W/kg.
Read more at - http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9217287/What_s_your_cell_phone_s_maximum_radiation_level_Interactive_database?taxonomyId=15&pageNumber=1
 
 
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