Radiation from microwave ovens

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When a microwave oven is opened, there is a consensus that no radiation escapes due to the rapid absorption of microwaves by the oven's walls and contents. The analogy comparing microwave radiation to light is used to illustrate this point, emphasizing that microwaves are absorbed quickly after the source is turned off. Although microwave walls are highly reflective, they are not 100% so, and any residual radiation dissipates almost instantaneously. Calculations show that even with high reflectivity, the time it takes for microwaves to fade is extremely short, often less than a fraction of a second. Thus, the design of microwave ovens ensures safety by preventing radiation escape when the door is opened.
gudny
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Everybody seems to agree that when a microwave oven is opened, no radiation escapes. On a different thread, somebody said: "Microwave radiation is like light: it absorbs quickly into objects after the source is turned off." This analogy to light is often used to explain why no microwave radiation escapes when the door is opened.
But if I have understood correctly, the walls of the microwave oven almost completely reflect microwave radiation. So the equivalent thing would be would a light source within a room of mirrors. Where the light would of course not be instantly absorbed.
Say that we had an empty oven and we open it, wouldn´t the radiation that had not been absorbed by walls and magnetron escape through the open door?
 
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If you turn off a light bulb in a room full of mirrors and open the door a second later, do you still see the light?
 
The radiation is absorbed in the realm of a tiny tiny fraction of a second. If you just hit the button to open the door while the microwave is running, the time it takes for the mechanism to actually open the door is long enough for any microwaves to be absorbed by the oven and food. Even empty the oven is not 100% reflective.
 
gudny said:
Everybody seems to agree that when a microwave oven is opened, no radiation escapes. On a different thread, somebody said: "Microwave radiation is like light: it absorbs quickly into objects after the source is turned off." This analogy to light is often used to explain why no microwave radiation escapes when the door is opened.
But if I have understood correctly, the walls of the microwave oven almost completely reflect microwave radiation. So the equivalent thing would be would a light source within a room of mirrors. Where the light would of course not be instantly absorbed.
Say that we had an empty oven and we open it, wouldn´t the radiation that had not been absorbed by walls and magnetron escape through the open door?
What is "almost" here? Whatever it is, use that number and calculate how many times it has to reflect to fade into the background. Then, use the speed of light and the size of the microwave to figure out how long it would take. Is it possible to open the door that fast?
 
gudny said:
Say that we had an empty oven and we open it, wouldn´t the radiation that had not been absorbed by walls and magnetron escape through the open door?
Sure, but you are grossly underestimating
1] just how fast light and microwaves move, and
2] just how reflective any surface can be

Even if the walls could reflect a thousand times, the radiation would all be dissipated in less than 3/100,000ths of a second.
 
Google tells me that even if we assume a 0.5 m wide microwave, and 1 millisecond for time to open door, the microwaves will be reflected 599,585 times.

https://www.google.com/search?&q=c+*0.001s+/+0.5m

Assuming 99.99% reflection that gives:
.9999599585 = 9 x 10-25%

Not a whole lot, even with very generous estimates.
 
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