Yes, any electromagnetic wave can travel through a vacuum.
A microwave is near the "red" side of the electromagnetic scale. All electromagnetic travels at the same rate. Light is a form of electromagnetic radiation which travels through a vacuum (space). Thereofore, being a part of electormagnetic radiation, microwaves will travel through a vacuum.
Yes, microwaves can travel through a vacuum because they are a form of electromagnetic radiation, which can propagate through empty space. This is why microwave communication works in space and is used in satellite communications.
Light does travel through a vacuum.
No. Only light waves can travel through a vacuum.
i think voice cannot travel through vacuum.
No, compressional waves require a medium to travel through, so they cannot travel through a vacuum where there is no matter. Sound waves, which are compressional waves, cannot propagate through a vacuum.
Sound cannot travel through a vacuum as it needs a medium, such as air, water, or solid material, to propagate. In a vacuum, there are no particles for sound waves to travel through, so the speed of sound is essentially zero.
All forms of electromagnetic waves travel through vacuum at the same speed.It doesn't matter whether it's a wave of heat, radio, microwave, visible light,ultraviolet, X-ray, or gamma ray. It travels through vacuum at299,792,458 meters (186,282 miles) per second.
Yeah, radiation can travel in vacuum and a practical example of it is the radiation of sun coming to earth and traveling through space.
sound can't travel through a vacuum. or a place without air.
The vacuum becomes no longer a vacuum.
No, ultrasound cannot travel through a vacuum because it requires a medium, such as air or water, to propagate. In a vacuum, there are no particles for the sound wave to travel through, so it cannot propagate.