What is Microwaves: Definition and 79 Discussions

Microwave is a form of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths ranging from about one meter to one millimeter corresponding to frequencies between 300 MHz and 300 GHz respectively. Different sources define different frequency ranges as microwaves; the above broad definition includes both UHF and EHF (millimeter wave) bands. A more common definition in radio-frequency engineering is the range between 1 and 100 GHz (wavelengths between 0.3 m and 3 mm). In all cases, microwaves include the entire SHF band (3 to 30 GHz, or 10 to 1 cm) at minimum. Frequencies in the microwave range are often referred to by their IEEE radar band designations: S, C, X, Ku, K, or Ka band, or by similar NATO or EU designations.
The prefix micro- in microwave is not meant to suggest a wavelength in the micrometer range. Rather, it indicates that microwaves are "small" (having shorter wavelengths), compared to the radio waves used prior to microwave technology. The boundaries between far infrared, terahertz radiation, microwaves, and ultra-high-frequency radio waves are fairly arbitrary and are used variously between different fields of study.
Microwaves travel by line-of-sight; unlike lower frequency radio waves they do not diffract around hills, follow the earth's surface as ground waves, or reflect from the ionosphere, so terrestrial microwave communication links are limited by the visual horizon to about 40 miles (64 km). At the high end of the band, they are absorbed by gases in the atmosphere, limiting practical communication distances to around a kilometer. Microwaves are widely used in modern technology, for example in point-to-point communication links, wireless networks, microwave radio relay networks, radar, satellite and spacecraft communication, medical diathermy and cancer treatment, remote sensing, radio astronomy, particle accelerators, spectroscopy, industrial heating, collision avoidance systems, garage door openers and keyless entry systems, and for cooking food in microwave ovens.

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  1. M

    Safe Fluid Flow in Modified Microwaves: How to Protect Yourself?

    Hi, Rather than jump on the other thread about microwaves, i thought id start this one! If i were to drill a couple of holes in a microwave oven in order to have a coil of plastic pipe with fluid flowing through it coming out of the holes, how would i protect myself from being cooked? I...
  2. B

    Real component of the wavelength of microwaves in copper

    I am trying to work out the real component of the wavelength of microwaves in copper. I am given n2=er=-i sigma/eo omega where n is the refactive index er is the relative permitivity eo is the permitivity of free space i = sqrt(-1) omega is the frequency of the microwave sigma is the...
  3. U

    The Effect of pulsed Microwaves on Bacteria

    We are interested in looking at the effect of the pulsing of microwaves subjected to power and time of eg 50W for 10 seconds at 2.45GHz but pulsing the microwaves as well to investigate the added kill effect that the pulsing adds, comparing plate counts before irradiation, after non pulsed...
  4. 0

    How Much Energy is Carried by One Trillion Photons of 20 cm Microwaves?

    Homework Statement GSM networks use microwaves of 20 cm in wavelength. The energy carried by one trillion (10^12) photons of this wavelength is closest to ... Question 1 answers A)10-16 Joules b)10-15 Joules c)10-14 Joules d)10-13 Joules e)10-12 Joules Homework...
  5. D

    Doppler shift with microwaves i think

    Doppler shift with microwaves...i think... Homework Statement Microwaves, which travel at the speed of light, are reflected from a distant airplane approaching the microwave source. It is found that when the reflected waves are beat against the waves radiating from the source, the beat...
  6. F

    Steam Generation with Microwaves

    Hello reader, I was heating some coffee in the microwave oven today when I had an idea come to me. Is it Possible to heat water with microwaves, (dielectric heating) to superheat water? Then allow it to form to steam, turn that steam into dry steam. And then use that to turn a generator...
  7. J

    Why do microwaves heat honey so fast?

    I've noticed that honey reaches a boiling point quicker than the same amount of water. I've melted a few plastic honey containers before I learned my lesson. Physics-wise, why is that? I thought a microwave oven targeted water molecules. I know honey is mostly water, but why does it heat up...
  8. C

    Reflection and Absorbtion of Microwaves, also Masers

    I have tried searching for answers to these questions but i can't seem to find them, so if anyone could help me it would be greatly appreciated. How efficiently you can reflect microwaves? I know visible light can be reflected at 99.99% efficiency or something ridiculous like that, is it the...
  9. H

    Standing wave with microwaves

    A microwave generator can produce microwaves at any frequency between 10 GHz and 20 GHz. The microwaves are aimed, through a small hole, into a "microwave cavity" that consists of a d = 8 cm-long cylinder with reflective ends. Select all frequencies from those tabulated below which will...
  10. T

    Why Shouldn't You Put Metal Pots in a Microwave?

    What would happen? Why
  11. S

    Gps, Mobile phones microwaves and radiowaves

    Hello, friends! I've google about the question below but no success! The question is: Gps signals inside buildings are nonexistent or very weak, but mobile phone and am and fm radio signals are good, so the question is: why gps satellites and mobile phone comunications don't use emission...
  12. A

    Does Carrying a Cellphone on a Waist Belt Reduce Microwave Radiation to the Brain?

    Dear All, Please excuse my ignorance of physics. According to some Russian research 1 mW of microwave radiation could be considered safe for the brain (ie. it won't cause brain damage). I therefore considered that if a 1 W cellphone is damaging to the brain then perhaps it's a good idea to use...
  13. M

    Microwaves and Weird Neighbors

    Is it possible to injure your neighbor with microwaves using the heater of a microwave oven when there is a thick wall yours and your neighbor's apartments? I know this is a really weird questions, but that's because it's related to a really weird situation. A friend of mine does not get along...
  14. M

    Why is food cooked differently by microwaves than by an infra-red grill?

    And why can't food be cooked with X-rays or radio waves?
  15. F

    What are the amplitudes called for blue visible light, and microwaves?

    The amplitude of sound waves is commonly referred to as volume. What about for blue visible light, and microwaves? I'm guessing for the first one it's brightness. Btw I'm looking for a word answer, not the magnitude of the amplitude (not a numerical amplitude) Thanks for reading.
  16. L

    Metal in Microwaves: Glass or Metal?

    A compact disc contains an extremely thin sheet of aluminum. If you put a larger block of metal in a microwave oven along with a CD and turn the oven on, a) nothing significant happens b) only the metal will spark and then melt c) the metal will melt and the CD will spark d) only the CD...
  17. D

    Microwaves interfering with vehicles electronics

    i am interested in weather or not a salvaged magnatron from a microwave oven will be enough to interfer with electronics if it were to be housed in an aluminum box with a tube on the side that the magnatronwould be emitting from to (direct the emissions)?
  18. K

    Did the Hydrogen Cell Cause Our Microwave to Stop Working?

    hey guys I have a question ...I built a hydrogen cell and was testing it in my kitchen for a few hrs to see how much the water temp would rise.Now a while back our microwave gave up its ghost and would make some nasty elecrtical sounds when we would turn it on,so we only used it for the stove...
  19. D

    Heating water - microwaves vs kettle?

    I don't know whether this is appropriate for this sort of forum, but what would be the difference between microwaving standard tap water and boiling it in a kettle? Not just any water, but hard London tapwater (eek), with all sorts of delicious impurities. There's a marked difference in...
  20. B

    How Do Film Badges Used in Nuclear Plants Respond to Microwave Radiation?

    Someone told me that the film badges used in nuclear plants respond to microwave radiation from microwave ovens, as well as to the ionizing radiation they're intended for. I don't understand how this could work. Can someone explain it, or is it just not true?
  21. Mk

    How can microwaves melt metal?

    Can microwaves melt metal? As far as I know, it can't melt a spoon no matter how long you put it in a microwave oven. Is it possible to get microwaves to melt metal?
  22. D

    Microwaves with Nothing Inside

    Can the microwaves emitted from a microwave that is turned on and running with nothing in it have an effect on nearby electronics, i.e. computers, cell phones, surround sound receivers?
  23. ranger

    Is 2.5 GHz the optimal frequency for microwaves to cook food?

    I'm just curious. Why is it that we use microwave ovens to cook food and not some other wave of the EM spectrum? --thanks.
  24. D

    Microwaves - finding the wavelength

    Hi everyone, we were looking at different ways of finding out the wavelength of a microwave in physics a few days back, and one of them was to soak a piece of paper in a solution and put it into a microwave iven, when this solution got hot/warm it changed colour to blue. Does anyone know what...
  25. Amith2006

    How Do You Calculate the Frequency of Microwaves Using Standing Waves?

    Sir, 1)Microwaves are directed normally at a plane metallic reflector. A detector moving along the normal to the reflector travels 15 cm from the first to the 11th successive of minimum intensity. What is the frequency of the microwave?(velocity of microwaves = 3 x 10^8 m/sec) I solved it...
  26. S

    Can i use a prism to diffract(separate?) ultralight or microwaves

    can i use a prism to diffract(separate?) ultralight or microwaves, if so, how far into the spectrum will it go? for example, when i look at a rainbow, and the rainbow ends after the violet and before the red, does it really end? or am i just unable to see the missing wavelengths?
  27. M

    Heating Ice in Microwaves: How Does It Work?

    Hi everybody, I recently took a piece of meat from the freezer and put it in the microwave in order to defrost it. Then I realized that this actually shouldn't work. I don't see how you can heat ice in a microwave. So how does this work? I've tried it on ice cream (don't repeat that...
  28. T

    Microwaves don t pass thru the door of the microwave oven

    microwaves don"t pass thru the door of the microwave oven :confused: How come microwaves don"t pass thru the door of the microwave oven. Those small holes I believe have to do with this right? but how?
  29. M

    Are Microwaves Bad for Your Health?

    By "microwaves", I mean microwave ovens. My brother has recently read a paper that pointed out all kinds of reasons why microwaved food is bad for you, but he can't find the paper, and I'm just not convinced that there should be any problem here. Does anyone here know about this? BTW, he...
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