Yes, although probably not the kind you're thinking about. Microwaves use electromagnetic radiation to heat food. If the microwave is properly constructed and not damaged, none of that radiation escapes.
As a matter of fact, radiators do emit radiation. Just not the dangerous ionizing type such as gamma and x-rays. Radiators like the ones in trucks and cars, and the heater types in some homes emit Infared Radiation that we sense as heat.
A LASER, or Light Amplification by Simulated Emission of Radiation, and is made by causing a particular substance to emit photons, almost all of which are one wavelength. A flashlight, however, uses a light bulb, which emits light due to the filaments, and will spread out. Both, however, are forms of light.
The load of a flashlight is the bulb.
Neutron stars are able to produce pulses of radiation because they are rotating, and only a certain place on the neutron star releases the radiation(just like how light comes out of a flashlight). As the neutron star rotates, the point on the neutron star also moves along. When it points toward the Earth, we see the pulse.
The answer is governed by the size of the flashlight. Count the amount of batteries that go into the flashlight and then multiply by 1.5 and this will give you the voltage of the flashlight. For NiCd and NiMH rechargeable batteries multiply by 1.3 volts.
The flashlight does.
The light produced by a flashlight is electromagnetic radiation.
"Go through"? The process of charging and using a crank flashlight includes the existence of thermal, mechanical, electromagnetic, sound and radiation energy.
No, absolutely not. The phone emits radiation -- but not the bad kind. It emits the same kind of radiation as your flashlight or radio, it's not going to damage anything. The "bad kind" of radiation (ionizing radiation) can damage your "private part", but there's none of it in your phone.
Heat to make the filament glow white hot and emit light (electromagnetic radiation).
To install a flashlight software on your cell phone and open the flashlight of camera as a normal flashlight.
No, flashlight is a noun
flashlight
Yes, a flashlight is a tool.
A LASER, or Light Amplification by Simulated Emission of Radiation, and is made by causing a particular substance to emit photons, almost all of which are one wavelength. A flashlight, however, uses a light bulb, which emits light due to the filaments, and will spread out. Both, however, are forms of light.
I have never seen a flashlight with a fuse.UK residents would call a flashlight a torch.
there is no flashlight
A flashlight outputs light and heat.