Pretty self-explanatory on these events. I was filming EMF emissions, and noticed as I stepped away with the camera the emissions immediately jumped up by a factor of 2 to 3. I demonstrated it a handful of times.
Suggesting the source of the EMF emissions is sensing my location or the camera's location relative to the EMF meter. Why, I have no idea yet. Again, my Nikon camera has never emitted any EMF that I've seen on a meter, so the emissions are not from the camera. And if they were from the camera it seems the readings would go up as the camera grew closer to the meter, which is the opposite of what happened. Go figure.
But I do know this, as I move the camera close to the EMF meter the readings drop dramatically and rather instantaneously. The same when I move the camera away, the readings jump up rather dramatically and instantaneously.
Your thoughts are welcome on figuring this one out if that's possible. Remember too, the EMF readings I'm documenting are at dangerous levels according to the manufacturer of the meter, who recommends humans not stay in the presence of them at all.
Finally, it almost seems like the EMF source doesn't want the camera to record the higher EMF emission levels, especially consider they are dangerous levels. HaHaHaHa and Merry Christmas!
As I finish this the Max EMF reading on my camera is 44,600 and the Peak readings are all above 30,000 mw/sm for the last 45 seconds. That's an EMF bombardment to me.
I want to clarify something. The readings from my meter are in microwatts and not milliwatts. This link is the safe exposure levels SafeLiving Technologies Inc posted to its website, the manufacturer of the meter.
https://safelivingtechnologies.com/content/Education/EMF-Exposure-Guidelines-For-Sleeping-Areas.pdf
Notice the table at the top of the page. Row 1 in the table is the safety list for microwatts per square meter. The Severe Concern column lists 10-1000 and the Extreme Concern column lists anything greater than 1,000. Remember, the readings I posted in this video includes Max and Peak readings of more than 40,000, 40 times the minimum Extreme Concern minimum.
Anybody with a wi-fi router in their home can easily experience more than 1,000 microWatts per square meter routinely throughout the day based on my use of the meter and its predecessor for the past 5+ years..