The question comes up constantly: "Which Aires device do I need?" and "Do I actually need more than one?" The answer isn't simple — not because the products are complicated, but because EMF exposure isn't a single-source problem. This guide explains each device, the difference between them, how they work together, and answers every common question about layering and coverage.
The Lineup at a Glance
All five Aires products are built on two resonator architectures — each optimized for a different modulation geometry. Learn how the resonators work here.
Every Aires device is complete on its own. Stacking doesn’t fix what’s missing — it creates something none of them can build alone.
A single Aires resonator does exactly what it’s engineered to do. Your One is not waiting for a Flex to complete it. Your Flex is not insufficient without a Zone Max in the room. Each device produces a coherent field within its operating range — fully, independently, by design. Don’t let the layering logic make you feel like a single device isn’t enough. It is.
What changes when you add a second resonator isn’t more coverage of the same thing. It’s the emergence of a third state: a combined coherent field that neither resonator could produce on its own. When two coherent fields interact, they constructively interfere — the result is exponentially stronger, more spatially stable, and more extensive than either source alone. Research into multi-resonator configurations confirms this: the gain isn’t linear. It compounds.
This is why users who add a second Aires device almost universally notice it — not because the first device was underperforming, but because the combined coherent field state is a qualitatively different environment than either device creates alone.
“Combinations of four and six resonators give a significantly greater amplitude of response compared to the case of a single resonator.”
— Prof. G.N. Lukyanov et al., ITMO University, 2025 · Read the research →
Start Here: Why the Aires One Is the First Device Almost Everyone Needs
The Aires One is not the "entry-level" product — it's the most targeted intervention for the single highest-intensity EMF exposure most people have every day: their smartphone.
Your phone is held against your body, pressed to your ear, placed on your lap or bedside table within inches of your face while you sleep. Research consistently shows that phones at contact range generate some of the highest personal EMF exposure in everyday life — and unlike a router across the room, a phone is in direct physical contact with you for hours daily.
The Aires One's 16S5G resonator mounts directly to your phone and operates at the point of emission. When you hold your phone, the resonator is between the device and your body — producing coherent field modulation precisely where it matters most. This is source-level modulation: the most direct and efficient form of structural field transformation.
For most people building their first layer of coverage, the smartphone is the right starting point — it's your highest-intensity personal EMF source, always on, always at close range. The Aires One delivers source-level modulation mounted directly to your device. It's targeted, accessible, and the most direct first intervention for the majority of people.
If you already have the Flex (worn around your neck), you're covered — the Flex provides sufficient personal coverage including at phone range, and you don't need to add a One on top of it. Where the One adds value: as your entry point before you have a Flex, or as a direct device-mounted complement alongside the Flex you're already wearing.
Also applies to: tablets used by children — an Aires One mounted to the device provides source-level modulation during screen time. The compact Go also works well for young users as a low-profile portable.
Aires Go: Dual-Resonator Portable — Compact and Always-On
The Aires Go is a compact portable resonator — smaller than the Flex, polymer coated, with a hole that lets you thread it onto a ring, necklace, keychain, or clip. It goes with you on your person. It does not affix to a device the way the One does.
Inside the Go are two 16S5G resonators, each centered on an antenna on opposite sides of the unit. Together they generate overlapping coherent fields that benefit from the superadditive interaction described in detail below — two correlated resonators constructively interfering to produce a combined field stronger than either could achieve alone. The Go is the only portable entry in the Aires lineup with this dual-resonator architecture built in.
The Go's documented effective range is close to the Flex — placing it in the same wearable tier despite the smaller physical form. From a physics standpoint, the dual-resonator construction means the Go generates a stronger combined coherent field than its size would suggest. Its compact form factor makes it practical where the Flex is too large or isn't the right fit: children (a keychain or pendant scales better to a smaller frame than the Flex), pets (clips to a collar or carrier), or anyone who prefers an unobtrusive portable over a conventional wearable.
The One is a thin coin-sized sticker (roughly dime-sized) that mounts directly to a device. The Go is a polymer-coated portable that carries on your person — ring, necklace, keychain, or clip. Both use the 16S5G resonator. The Go adds a second chip with antennas on both sides, creating a dual-resonator coherent field not present in the One. They address different things: the One delivers source-level modulation at a specific device; the Go provides compact portable dual-resonator field coverage wherever you are.
Aires Flex: The Wearable Resonator — and How It Differs From the Go
This is the comparison that generates the most questions: Go vs. Flex. Both are portable and worn on the body. But they differ in resonator architecture, surface area, and how they interact with your field environment.
Aires Go
Two 16S5G resonators with antennas on both sides. Compact portable — worn on a ring, keychain, necklace, or clip. Generates a superadditive dual-resonator coherent field from a small, low-profile form factor. Range close to the Flex.
Architecture: portable/wearable, dual 16S5G, superadditive
Best for: compact daily carry, children, pets, those who prefer a low-profile portable
Aires Flex
One 64P1S5G resonator with a larger surface area. Worn on the body. A fundamentally different resonator architecture — optimized for broader ambient field modulation from a larger contact surface. Continuous coverage as you move through your day.
Architecture: wearable, 64P1S5G, broad surface ambient modulation
Best for: adults, daily carry, high-EMF environments, HRV optimization
From a physics standpoint, the two aren't simply size variants — they use different resonator geometries. The Go's dual 16S5G chips generate a superadditive coherent field from two correlated sources. The Flex's 64P1S5G uses a different lattice structure optimized for broader ambient interaction from a larger surface. The documented range of the two is similar. Which performs better from a biological standpoint is an open research question — though anecdotally, the Flex has shown consistently strong results, particularly in HRV.
Anecdotally, the Aires Flex consistently shows strong results in HRV — heart rate variability, the most widely used metric for autonomic nervous system state and recovery quality. Whether this reflects the 64P1S5G architecture specifically, the continuous body-contact placement, or the wearable's around-the-clock ambient modulation isn't fully resolved from current research. But the practical signal has been consistent and notable enough to be worth naming.
Form factor note: The Go's compact form makes it practical where the Flex isn't the right fit — children, pets, or anyone who prefers a low-profile portable. For adults, the Flex and Go address the wearable layer with different architectures and work well together in a layered setup.
Zone and Zone Max: The Room Layer
The Zone products use the 64P1S5G architecture in a freestanding form factor designed to modulate the ambient field environment across a room. They address a fundamentally different exposure source than the device-attached or wearable products: the always-on background field from WiFi routers, mesh networks, smart TVs, and other stationary devices that run continuously whether you're actively using them or not.
Your router is emitting 24/7. You're not holding it against your body, but it's also not something an Aires One on your phone addresses. The Zone products are the right tool for this layer.
Zone vs. Zone Max: primarily a function of coverage area and field output. The Zone Max is appropriate for larger rooms, open-plan spaces, and environments with higher EMF density (multiple routers, heavy smart device presence, commercial or office settings).
Placement matters: Zone products are most effective when placed in the room where you spend the most time — typically the bedroom (for sleep quality) or primary workspace.
The Synergistic Effect: Why Multiple Resonators Aren't Just "More Protection"
This is one of the most technically important and practically underappreciated aspects of the Aires system. The relationship between multiple resonators is not additive — it is superadditive.
Here's the physics: a single resonator produces a coherent field structure within its operating range. The coherent field hologram it creates is a stable, spatially-extended structure. When multiple resonators operate in the same environment, the coherent fields they generate interact — and because they are coherent fields (correlated in phase and frequency), they can constructively interfere in ways that incoherent fields cannot.
The result is a combined coherent field that is more extensive, more stable, and more effective than either resonator could produce in isolation. Research into multi-resonator configurations has shown that layered installations produce measurably amplified coherent field coverage — the gain is exponential in character, not linear. Adding a second resonator to an environment that already has one doesn't just double the effect; the overlap creates a fundamentally stronger coherent state in the shared zone.
A household where every personal device has an Aires One, each person carries a Go or wears a Flex, and a Zone Max is placed in the primary living space creates a mutually reinforcing coherent field network. Each device strengthens the others' effect. This is why the Aires system is designed as a layered approach — not because any single product is insufficient, but because the interaction between multiple coherent field sources produces a qualitatively different result than any one of them alone.
This also explains why professional users — including performance athletes using the Aires system as part of HRV and recovery protocols — tend to use multiple devices. The compound effect of layered coherent field coverage is measurably different from single-device use.
Common Questions — Answered Directly
If I have a Flex, do I still need the One?
Generally, no. If you're wearing the Flex around your neck, it provides sufficient coverage for your personal environment — including at phone range. The Flex is designed to be worn around the neck, keeping it close to your body throughout the day. At that proximity, it covers what matters for everyday use. You don't need to add an Aires One on top of it.
The One adds a direct source-level layer mounted at the emission point of your device. Some users choose to combine both — and the two do complement each other. But the Flex alone is sufficient.
The logic runs more strongly in the other direction: if you have only the Aires One, adding the Flex makes a clear difference. The Flex covers you across complex environments — whenever you leave home, in high-EMF spaces, or at home if you don't have a Zone or Zone Max — in ways the One alone doesn't address.
I have a Zone Max. Do I still need a One?
Yes, definitively.
The Zone Max modulates the ambient field in your room — from routers, smart TVs, mesh networks, and other stationary sources. This is a spatial product for spatial exposure.
Your phone held against your body is not a spatial, distributed field source. It is a high-intensity point source in direct contact with you. The Zone Max's spatial coverage does not substitute for source-level modulation at a device you're actively holding, pressing to your ear, or sleeping next to.
Think of it this way: a Zone Max in your bedroom improves the ambient field quality of your sleep environment. But if you're sleeping with your phone on the nightstand six inches from your face, the most significant exposure in that moment is the phone — and that's what the Aires One addresses. You need both.
I have a One on my phone. Do my kids need one?
Yes — if your children use personal devices.
Your Aires One modulates the field radiating from your phone. It does not address the emissions from your child's iPad, tablet, or phone. Each person's primary device-level exposure comes from their own device.
The One's modulated field does extend beyond the phone itself — people in close proximity to you do receive some benefit from being within your device's coherent field zone. But proximity matters sharply: a child sitting across the room, or using their own device independently, is not within the meaningful operating range of your One.
For children, an Aires One on their primary device (tablet, phone) provides direct source-level coverage. The compact Aires Go is also a practical option — its small form factor works well as a low-profile portable for children, attaching to a backpack, keychain, or worn as a pendant.
Children's developing nervous systems are generally considered to be more sensitive to environmental stressors than adults'. This is one of the strongest arguments for prioritizing device-level protection for young users.
If I have a Flex, do the people around me benefit?
To a degree — but not as a substitute for their own protection.
The Flex produces a coherent field zone that extends around your body. People in very close and sustained proximity — a partner sharing a bed, a child being held — are within that field zone and receive some benefit from the Flex's ambient modulation.
But the coherent field gradient drops with distance. A partner across the dinner table, a coworker in the adjacent seat, or a child playing nearby but not in physical contact is not meaningfully within your Flex's effective range.
Your Flex is your device, calibrated for your exposure environment. The people around you have their own exposure environments — their own phones, their own devices, their own field interactions. Give them their own Aires device.
Why do I need more than one Aires device at all?
Because your EMF environment isn't a single-source problem.
Consider a typical day: you wake up next to your phone (nightstand or under pillow). You shower and return to your phone. You work on a laptop for hours. You spend time in a space with WiFi, smart devices, and a mesh router. You carry your phone in your pocket or hold it in your hand. You sleep in a room with a WiFi router a room away and your phone again nearby.
These are distinct exposure types — device-contact, ambient personal, always-on background — requiring different interventions:
- Phone, tablet, or other device → Aires One (coin-sized sticker, source-level modulation mounted directly to the device)
- Compact portable wearable → Aires Go (dual 16S5G, ring/keychain/necklace, superadditive coherent field from a small form factor)
- Full wearable for continuous ambient coverage → Aires Flex (64P1S5G, larger surface, continuous field modulation throughout your day)
- Home/workspace background field → Aires Zone or Zone Max (freestanding spatial ambient modulation)
Each device addresses a layer that the others don't. And because of the superadditive synergy between resonators, using multiple devices doesn't just stack coverage linearly — the overlapping coherent fields create a mutually reinforcing effect measurably stronger than any single layer alone.
You don't need all four products immediately. Start with the highest-leverage intervention (the One on your phone), then layer from there based on your exposure environment and priorities.
What's the right order to build a setup?
Here's the layering logic most people follow:
- Aires One first — your smartphone is your highest-intensity personal exposure source. Start here regardless of what else you plan to add.
- Aires Go for daily carry — a compact dual-resonator portable that goes on a keychain, ring, or necklace. Practical for children and pets as well.
- Aires Flex for continuous ambient coverage — larger 64P1S5G wearable. Adds the full wearable layer with consistently strong HRV results.
- Aires Zone or Zone Max for your primary space — the bedroom first (for sleep quality and recovery), then primary workspace.
- Additional Aires Ones for family members' devices — each person's phone or tablet benefits from its own source-level coverage.
Every layer compounds the others. A home with Ones on all devices, each person carrying a Go or wearing a Flex, and a Zone Max in the bedroom is a qualitatively different field environment than any single device could create.