• starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    A simple refutation is that metal gets hot in the microwave, and it has no water in it. Microwave radiation heats many things, not just water

    • Doctor xNo@r.nf
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      9 months ago

      Only at the points it discharges the waves electrically. All the rest of the metal usually stays quite cold,… I’ve taken out plenty of forgotten spoons in my lifetime. 😅 Hence why microwavable metal is a thing. (Like the metal rack the usualky cones with combi-ovens.) Metal is a good heatconductor though, so microwavable metal will easily get hotter than the food heating it (much like your car’s metal exterior getting hotter from the sun than it’s environment), yet if you microwave that metal on its own it will not heat up at all…

      • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        Metal is a good heatconductor though, so microwavable metal will easily get hotter than the food heating it

        That’s… not how heat conduction works. Something can’t get hotter than the thing that’s heating it. What’s heating the metal is the microwave radiation.

        yet if you microwave that metal on its own it will not heat up at all…

        But

        It does

        Metal that’s designed to be part of the microwave, like a rack or the walls, is designed specifically to avoid heating up. But like, a spoon by itself on the turntable will definitely get hot if you microwave it

        • Doctor xNo@r.nf
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          9 months ago

          It was simplified for ease. Metal indeed does not actually get hotter than its environment, but due to it’s heat conductivity it has the ability to relay any surrounding heat when any spot gets cooled down (like when you touch it), it will transfer surrounding heat-energy to the colder spot, which it can do better than most other materials.

          Either way, any spoon I ever accidentally microwaved remained quite cold tbh, though I have not tested this out over extended periods of time. Any heated food touching it will still be the main source it will draw energy from when touched, though…

          • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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            9 months ago

            I don’t know how we manage to live under different laws of physics then, because I have definitely touched metal that had been in the microwave and gotten hot, and there are videos of people putting metal in the microwave showing it getting hot without sparking. Unless me, everyone I know, those guys, and all their commenters are all lying, metal will most definitely get hot in the microwave

            Am I getting sharks are smoothed?

    • Madison420@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Different principle entirely but ask a physicist, I’m not telling you to trust me. I’m telling you to look, learn, and experiment.

      Ed: Here’s a hint. The first microwave was called a radarrange.

      • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        But I have experimented… I’ve melted plastic spoons in the microwave before. Where’s the water in plastic?

        Edit: that’s not really a hint. What does radar have to do with how microwaves heat things?

        • Madison420@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Those aren’t microwave safe then, other materials react as well but microwaves are tuned to shame water really well and most everything else not as well.

          Yes it is. Microwaves came from radar and radar works on the same principal.

          Ed:

          In 1945, the heating effect of a high-power microwave beam was accidentally discovered by Percy Spencer, an American self-taught engineer from Howland, Maine. Employed by Raytheon at the time, he noticed that microwaves from an active radar set he was working on started to melt a Mr. Goodbar candy bar he had in his pocket. The first food deliberately cooked with Spencer’s microwave oven was popcorn, and the second was an egg, which exploded in the face of one of the experimenters.[12][13]

          To verify his finding, Spencer created a high-density electromagnetic field by feeding microwave power from a magnetron into a metal box from which it had no way to escape. When food was placed in the box with the microwave energy, the temperature of the food rose rapidly. On 8 October 1945, Raytheon filed a United States patent application for Spencer’s microwave cooking process, and an oven that heated food using microwave energy from a magnetron was soon placed in a Boston restaurant for testing.