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You are here: Home / Topics / WHITE LED LIGHTS MORE DANGEROUS.

WHITE LED LIGHTS MORE DANGEROUS.

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Electronics › Electronics › WHITE LED LIGHTS MORE DANGEROUS.

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 4 months ago by nikhiljain.
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  • September 25, 2011 at 10:28 am #1283
    VIKRAM
    Participant

    A new study has found that exposure to white LED bulbs suppresses our brain’s production of melatonin that is responsible,among other things,for the regulation of our biological clock,more than exposure to the bulbs emitting orange-yellow light.
    Melatonin is a compound that adjusts our biological clock and is known for its antioxidant and anti-cancerous properties.
    And it is known fact that suppressing the production of melatonin causes behavior distruptions and health problems.
    In this study, conducted by astronomers , physicists and biologist from ISTIL- Light Pollution Science and Technology Institute in Italy, the National Geophysical Data Centre in Boulder, Colorado, and the University of Haifa, researchers for the first time examined the differences in melatonin suppression in various types of light bulbs, primarily those used for outdoor illumination, such as streetlights, goad lighting, mall lighting and the like.
    They found that the metal halide bulb, which gives off a white light and is used for stadium lighting, among other uses, suppresses melatonin at a rate more than 3 times greater than the high-pressure sodium HPS bulb that gives off orange-yellow light.
    Also the light-emitting diode (LED) bulb, which also gives off a white light, was found suppressing melatonin at a rate more than 5 times higher than the HPS bulb.
    “The current migration from the now widely used sodium lams to white lamps will increase melatonin suppression in humans and animals,” the researchers said.
    Prof. Abraham Haim, head of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Chrono biological Research at the University of Haifa and the Israeli partner in the research concluded, “Just as there are regulations and rules for pollution stemming from artificial light at night.” The study was recently published in the Journal of Environmental Management.

    October 4, 2011 at 10:04 am #6666
    nikhiljain
    Participant

    Good One!!!

     

    Thanks for sharing!!!

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