Yes. Some glass plates are specially designed to withstand the excessive heat of an oven. However, some are not. See if there are any identifying marks on the plate to indicate that it is oven-proof.
no. If you do it will chip the plate. -- yes, you can because most microwaves already have glass plates in them to put food,etc on it when it turns. -- Yes you can, as long as there is no metal present (like a gold rim). Microwaves 'rocks' atoms so that they create friction, therby heating. If metal is present in the goods, there is a likelyhood of electricity beeing generated thus resulting in sparks. This is not true for a single spoon though.
Depends on the plate glass.
By lifting glass plate, and cover with another glass plate.
== == You put a specimen on a glass plate and then view the specimen under a microscope. It acts sort of like a slide.
because the cohesion of water molecules is less stronger than the adhesion of the water molecules
Because your teacher will probably have a fit. In the old days, you could put volumetric flasks into a drying oven, but you couldn't take volumetric flasks out of a drying oven... the heat would warp the glass slightly and introduce error into the calibration mark, so the flasks would not actually be volumetric anymore. However, borosilicate glass (Pyrex and the like) is much less heat-sensitive, and studies have shown that there's no discernable change in the capacity of borosilicate flasks even after repeated exposure to temperatures considerably higher than those normally found in a drying oven. So, aside from the aforementioned fit, there's no real reason not to do it as long as you're using borosilicate glass flasks.
If you put a fire under a glass plate or even put a glass plate in the oven it will heat up and break. Depending what is on the top of that plate it will more than likely catch on fire. If you're referring to the microwave then the food will get nice and hot.
Depends on what the plate is made of. If the plate was made by a heating process, such as ceramics baked in a kiln, the answer is usually yes. Products that specifically say oven-safe, such as Pyrex glass dishes, can go in the oven safely.
The HEC Microwave Oven comes With the Glass Turntable
No recommended, oven glass is designed for a specific purpose. It you what to put 'glass' on a burner, buy a 'pan' or product for that purpose
Yes, it can. A toaster oven is like mini oven, literally, a oven safe glass dish can be put in a toaster oven
plate
If this wine glass is made from common glass will crack.
Some Arcoroc glass bowls are oven proof. However, some are not. Only put the bowl in the oven if the words "Pyrex" appear on the bowl.
Stir the stick
== == You put a specimen on a glass plate and then view the specimen under a microscope. It acts sort of like a slide.
yes. i do it all the time ------------- If this wine glass is made from common glass will crack.
A conventional oven projects heat onto an object, warming it by passing the heat into the object from the heating elements. If the oven is turned off, the heat remains built up in the oven and the object will continue to cook until the heat has been dissipated. A microwave oven vibrates molecules to create heat from inside the object. Once the microwave stops, the molecules stop vibrating and the heat stops. The only heat remaining is eminating from the object as it cools. A microwave dish is sometimes made of plastic, Melamine or glass. None of these are safe to use in a conventional oven. Some glass containers such as Pyrex Glass are made for a conventioanl oven. Other glass containers may break. Glass will not melt with the heat an oven can produce, but the uneven cooling of the outside may differ from the inside and it could break. http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2002/SaiLee.shtml Glass not made for microwaves may break in the microwave. Bubbles in the glass may expand and crack the glass.